English
Adverb
- In an archaic
manner.
In
language, an archaism is the
use of a form of speech or writing that is no longer current. This
can either be done deliberately (to achieve a specific effect) or
as part of a specific
jargon (for example in
law) or formula (for example in
religious contexts).
Many
nursery
rhymes contain archaisms. Archaic elements that occur only in
certain fixed expressions (for example "be that as it may") are not
considered to be archaisms.
Usage
Archaisms are most frequently encountered in
poetry,
law, and
ritual writing and speech. Their
deliberate use can be subdivided into
literary archaisms, which
seeks to evoke the style of older speech and writing; and
lexical archaisms, the use of
words no longer in common use. Archaisms are kept alive by these
ritual and literary uses and by the study of older literature.
Should they remain recognised, they can be revived, as the word
anent was in this past century.
Some, such as academic and amateur
philologists,
enjoy learning and using archaisms either in speech or writing,
though this may sometimes be misconstrued as
pseudo-intellectualism.
Archaisms are frequently misunderstood, leading
to changes in usage. One example is the use of the archaic familiar
second person singular pronoun "
thou" to refer to God in English
Christianity. Although originally a familiar pronoun, it has been
misinterpreted as a respectful one by many modern Christians.
Another example is found in the
phrase "the odd man out", which
originally came from the phrase "to find the odd man out", where
the verb "to find out" has been split by its object "the odd man",
meaning the item which does not fit.
The compound adverbs and prepositions found in
the writing of
lawyers
(e.g. heretofore, hereunto, thereof) are examples of archaisms as a
form of jargon. Some
phraseologies, especially in
religious contexts, retain archaic elements that are not used in
ordinary speech in any other context: "With this ring I thee wed."
Archaisms are also used in the
dialogue of
historical
novels in order to evoke the flavour of the period. Some may
count as
inherently
funny words and are used for
humorous effect.
Alternative meanings
In
anthropological studies
of culture, archaism is defined as the absence of writing and
subsistence economy.
In history, archaism is used to connote a superior, albeit
mythical, "golden age."
See also
archaically in Bulgarian: Архаизъм
archaically in Czech: Archaismus
archaically in German: Archaismus
archaically in Modern Greek (1453-):
Αρχαϊσμός
archaically in Spanish: Arcaísmo
archaically in Esperanto: Arkaismo
archaically in Galician: Arcaísmo
archaically in Croatian: Arhaizmi
archaically in Interlingua (International
Auxiliary Language Association): Archaismo
archaically in Georgian: არქაიზმი
archaically in Hungarian: Archaizmus
archaically in Macedonian: Архаизам
archaically in Dutch: Archaïsme
archaically in Norwegian: Arkaisme
archaically in Norwegian Nynorsk: Arkaisme
archaically in Polish: Archaizm
archaically in Romanian: Arhaism
archaically in Russian: Архаизм
archaically in Slovak: Archaizmus
archaically in Swedish: Arkaism
archaically in Ukrainian:
Архаїзм