calque

Valid in Scrabble

Scrabble points
17
Words With Friends
20
Letters
6
Pronunciation
/kælk/

Definition of calque

2 senses · 2 parts of speech · etymology included

noun

  1. A word or phrase in a language formed by word-for-word or morpheme-by-morpheme translation of a word in another language.
    “David S. Powers, professor of Islamic history and law at Cornell, says he thinks that the word as used today is in the nature of what linguists call a calque, a borrowing from another language in literal translation […]”
    “Those phrases, translated from Spanish, are known as calques. […] The three young Miamians in the video also use “super” as an adverb, one of the calques from Spanish mentioned in Dr. Carter’s research. (“Ay, I’m super bloated.”)”
    “One of the primary benefits of calque is its ability to enhance cross-cultural communication.”
See all 2 definitions

noun

  1. A word or phrase in a language formed by word-for-word or morpheme-by-morpheme translation of a word in another language.
    “David S. Powers, professor of Islamic history and law at Cornell, says he thinks that the word as used today is in the nature of what linguists call a calque, a borrowing from another language in literal translation […]”
    “Those phrases, translated from Spanish, are known as calques. […] The three young Miamians in the video also use “super” as an adverb, one of the calques from Spanish mentioned in Dr. Carter’s research. (“Ay, I’m super bloated.”)”
    “One of the primary benefits of calque is its ability to enhance cross-cultural communication.”

verb

  1. (transitive)To adopt (a word or phrase) from one language to another by semantic translation of its parts.
    “Terms like "cloud computing" have been calqued into multiple languages, making it easier for global audiences to grasp complex technological concepts. […] For example, translating Shakespeare's works into other languages often involves calquing phrases to maintain the rhythm and metaphorical richness of the original.”

Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.

Etymology

From French calque (“calque”, literally “copy, tracing”), from calquer (“to copy, trace”) (whence also calk), itself borrowed from Italian calcare, from Latin calcāre (“to tread”). Doublet of calcate and calcation.

Anagrams of calque

1 play · all valid Scrabble

Hooks

2 extensions · 2 back

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