Translating and Glossing Nouns in the Old English Gospels: A Contrastive Study

Authors

  • Laura Esteban-Segura University of Murcia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.35360/njes.292

Keywords:

Old English Gospels, West Saxon, Lindisfarne gloss, Rushworth gloss, translation

Abstract

The translation of the Gospels into Old English has been a text edited on several occasions since the sixteenth century, from Parker’s edition (1571) to that by Skeat at the end of the nineteenth century (1871-1887) and, more recently, the one carried out by Liuzza in the second half of the twentieth century. The Old English Gospels have received attention from many scholars working in the field of English historical linguistics. Although the lexical level has been partially analysed (see for instance Liuzza 1994-2000), it is still an under-researched area. This article aims to examine three versions of the Gospels, namely West Saxon, Lindisfarne and Rushworth, in order to analyse the various mechanisms used by the translator(s) and glossators when rendering lexical items from the original Latin text into the different dialects. The analysis focuses on the study of nouns from an interdialectal perspective, since they are collated in the three different versions, so as to establish dialectal changes. A cross-linguistic approach is also pursued by assessing how the translator(s)/glossators interpreted nouns from Latin.

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Published

2014-04-06

How to Cite

Esteban-Segura, L. (2014). Translating and Glossing Nouns in the Old English Gospels: A Contrastive Study. Nordic Journal of English Studies, 13(1), 33–52. https://doi.org/10.35360/njes.292

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