Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun linguistics, uncountable The
misapplication offoreign pronunciation orusage . - noun linguistics, countable An instance or example of hyperforeignism.
Etymologies
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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This phenomenon is technically referred to as hyperforeignism, an offshoot of hypercorrecting.
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Omitting the final “s” is an example of a hyperforeignism: in French, this mispronunciation sounds like coup de gras, which means “blow of fat”, or cou de gras, which means “neck of fat”.
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I, too, actually find the systematic hyperforeignism hypothesis more credible than my own.
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"zone_info": "huffpost. style/blog; style = 1; nickname = brooks-peters; entry_id = 252705; antiques-roadshow = 1; coup-de-grace = 1; film-noir = 1; hyperforeignism = 1; language = 1; mispronunciation = 1; object-dart = 1; poseur = 1; tower-of-babel = 1",
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at the normal English pronunciation in favor of a pinyin pronunciation would shade closer to hyperforeignism in my mind akin to the newscasters' over-enunciated "Nee-kar-agggh-wa" for Nicaragua.
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HPConfig. blog_id = 0; var ads_page_type = 'bpage'; var zone_info = "huffpost. style/blog; style = 1; nickname = brooks-peters; entry_id = 252705; antiques-roadshow = 1; coup-de-grace = 1; film-noir = 1; hyperforeignism = 1; language = 1; mispronunciation = 1; object-dart = 1; poseur = 1; tower-of-babel = 1"; if (top!
Comments
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