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Publication Date:
May 2007
ISSN:
1613-0626
DOI:
10.1515/zfgl.33.2-3.361

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Zeitschrift für germanistische Linguistik

Deutsche Sprache in Gegenwart und Geschichte

Ed. by Ágel, Vilmos / Feilke, Helmuth / Linke, Angelika / Lüdeling, Anke / Tophinke, Doris

3 Issues per year

ERIH category INT2

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Kaff ‚elendes Nest‘: eine Kritik der Wolfschen Etymologie / Kaff ‘wretched little place’: Criticism of Wolf's etymology

Citation Information: Zeitschrift für Germanistische Linguistik. Volume 33, Issue 2-3, Pages 361–368, ISSN (Online) 1613-0626, ISSN (Print) 0301-3294, DOI: 10.1515/zfgl.33.2-3.361, May 2007

Publication History:
Published Online:
2007-05-24

Abstract

This paper discusses two hypotheses concerning the etymology of German Kaff ‘sleepy village, backwaters’, which derives from Rotwelsch Kaff ‘village’: (a) Rotw. Kaff derives from Romani gāw ‘village’ (Wolf). (b) Rotw. Kaff is a Yiddish acronymic abbreviation of Yiddish kefar ‘village’ (Avé-Lallemant). It is argued that Wolf's hypothesis is phonologically unlikely, that his argument against a Yiddish origin cannot stand up against scrutiny and that he either overlooked, or did not understand, Avé-Lallemant's hypothesis, which is phonologically likely and in accordance with a certain linguistic practice of older Yiddish.

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