Съществителните собствени имена от общ граматичен род в българския език
Common-gender Personal Names in Bulgarian: Grammatical and Pragmatic Aspects
Author(s): Radostina KolevaSubject(s): Language studies, Language and Literature Studies, Theoretical Linguistics, Applied Linguistics, Morphology, Philology
Published by: Институт за български език „Проф. Любомир Андрейчин“, Българска академия на науките
Keywords: anthroponyms; common-gender nouns; definite forms; expressiveness
Summary/Abstract: This paper examines common-gender personal names in contemporary Bulgarian, with a particular focus on the formation of their plural, definite and vocative forms. These anthroponyms can belong to masculine or feminine (but not neuter) gender, as in Alex and Kris; to masculine, feminine or neuter gender, e.g. Toni, Niki and Nase(to); to masculine or neuter gender: Zhore(to), Mite(to); or to feminine or neuter gender, as in Mi-mi(to) and Gerganche(to). The formation of the grammatical forms of such nouns has not been the subject of detailed study in Bulgarian linguistics. These personal names fall into the category of gender-defective nouns in contemporary Bulgarian, i.e. lexemes whose gender cannot be determined unambiguously. The study provides a critical re-view of key perspectives on the topic in Bulgarian linguistics, including the works of Ruselina Nitsolova, Stoyan Burov, Stefan Gardev and Krasimira Chakarova, among others. We adopt Krasimira Chakarova’s classification, which divides these anthroponyms into two broad groups: (1) nouns with a semantically motivated common gender (subdivided into further categories) and (2) nouns with a structurally motivated com-mon gender (also divided into subgroups). The paper also explores why some anthroponyms take a definite article, while others do not, arguing that this variation is influenced by stylistic and pragmatic factors.
Journal: Български език
- Issue Year: 72/2025
- Issue No: Special
- Page Range: 348-356
- Page Count: 9
- Language: Bulgarian