:''For the company called Relex, see
Relex Incorporated.''
'Relexification' is a term from
linguistics used in
pidgin and
creole studies for the mechanism by which one language changes its
lexicon to that of another language.
Relexification in pidgin formation
Main articles: Creole languages
Relexification is a form of
language interference in which a
pidgin or
creole language takes the great majority of its lexicon from the coloniser's language, for instance
English or
Portuguese, while its grammar comes either from an indigenous language, or (according to
universalist theories), arises from universal principles of simplification and grammaticalisation. A third possibility, that
all creole languages derive their grammar from the mediaeval
Mediterranean Lingua Franca is not now widely held.
In constructed language studies
In the context of
constructed languages, the term is applied to the process of creating a language by substituting new vocabulary into the grammar of an existing language, often one's native language. While this practice is most often associated with novice constructed language designers, it may also be done as an initial stage towards creating a more sophisticated language. A language thus created is known as a ''relex''.
Examples
★
Caló is a jargon used by
Gitanos (Spanish Gipsies), that mixes a
Spanish grammar with
Romany vocabulary.
★ A literary example of relexification is the comical quasi-Latin used by a character in
James Joyce's ''
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (p. 245):
::''Ego credo ut vita pauperum est simpliciter atrox, simpliciter sanguinarius atrox, in Liverpoolio.''
:: I think that the life of the poor is simply atrocious, simply bloody atrocious, in Liverpool.
References
★ Joyce, James. ''A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man''. New York, The Modern Library, 1928.
★ Arends, Jacques, Pieter Muysken, and Norval Smith. ''Pidgins and Creoles: an introduction.'' Amsterdam: Benjamins, 1995.
★ Sebba, Mark. ''Contact Languages: Pidgins and Creoles.'' Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire and London: Macmillan Press LTD, 1997.
See also
★ in the Conlang Wikibook