From a Woolen Curl to an Emotional Wave

A lexical item found in some languages like Bulgarian, Macedonian, Romanian or Russian basically denominating a woolen ball or curl made me think of how superficially and unilaterally some words are traced to their language of origins. Confusingly mixed up with Germanic, Romanian and Slavic roots t...

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Main Author: Nicolae STANCIU
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Galati University Press 2025-04-01
Series:ACROSS
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Online Access:https://www.gup.ugal.ro/ugaljournals/index.php/across/article/view/7560
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author Nicolae STANCIU
author_facet Nicolae STANCIU
author_sort Nicolae STANCIU
collection DOAJ
description A lexical item found in some languages like Bulgarian, Macedonian, Romanian or Russian basically denominating a woolen ball or curl made me think of how superficially and unilaterally some words are traced to their language of origins. Confusingly mixed up with Germanic, Romanian and Slavic roots the term volna has generated a multitude of discussions among researchers of different backgrounds (anthropologists, ethnologists, historians, linguists). Having been found in numerous groups of Indo-European languages, the root displaying a trichotomic meaning was constantly labelled as Slavic in Romanian without any etymological incursion into the origins and the historical evolution of the word. In fact, being one of those lexical units found at the confluence of some language families the concept-word волна ‘wool’ resulted from a long historical process of assimilation and evolution while traveling through ancient and modern languages and tell us about its symbolical meaning conventionally represented as a round wave graphically resembling the shape of letter W. In Romanian it generated an adjective, a noun and even a toponym whose symbolism is connected to a noun and a verb signifying freedom and setting somebody or something free. Tracing back the term to the hypothetical languages of origins has become a fruitful possibility to reveal its symbolism based on the evolution from a concrete woolen curl to an abstract spiral going up to a peak and returning down through a circular motion symbolically marked by the lower half of the round shaped wave.  Further on, the folk representation of demons and fairies who attract inattentive man or women who lose their way in the forest or die in the curved waves after becoming victims of their own illusions allowed us a cultural and discursive approach to etymology.
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spelling doaj-art-c4b4f6280b7d4c6bb364d2d59c65cbc72025-08-20T03:08:43ZengGalati University PressACROSS2602-14632025-04-0141From a Woolen Curl to an Emotional WaveNicolae STANCIU0Sts Cyril and Methodius University, Skopje, Macedonia A lexical item found in some languages like Bulgarian, Macedonian, Romanian or Russian basically denominating a woolen ball or curl made me think of how superficially and unilaterally some words are traced to their language of origins. Confusingly mixed up with Germanic, Romanian and Slavic roots the term volna has generated a multitude of discussions among researchers of different backgrounds (anthropologists, ethnologists, historians, linguists). Having been found in numerous groups of Indo-European languages, the root displaying a trichotomic meaning was constantly labelled as Slavic in Romanian without any etymological incursion into the origins and the historical evolution of the word. In fact, being one of those lexical units found at the confluence of some language families the concept-word волна ‘wool’ resulted from a long historical process of assimilation and evolution while traveling through ancient and modern languages and tell us about its symbolical meaning conventionally represented as a round wave graphically resembling the shape of letter W. In Romanian it generated an adjective, a noun and even a toponym whose symbolism is connected to a noun and a verb signifying freedom and setting somebody or something free. Tracing back the term to the hypothetical languages of origins has become a fruitful possibility to reveal its symbolism based on the evolution from a concrete woolen curl to an abstract spiral going up to a peak and returning down through a circular motion symbolically marked by the lower half of the round shaped wave.  Further on, the folk representation of demons and fairies who attract inattentive man or women who lose their way in the forest or die in the curved waves after becoming victims of their own illusions allowed us a cultural and discursive approach to etymology. https://www.gup.ugal.ro/ugaljournals/index.php/across/article/view/7560etymologywoolBulgarianRussianMacedonianRomanian
spellingShingle Nicolae STANCIU
From a Woolen Curl to an Emotional Wave
ACROSS
etymology
wool
Bulgarian
Russian
Macedonian
Romanian
title From a Woolen Curl to an Emotional Wave
title_full From a Woolen Curl to an Emotional Wave
title_fullStr From a Woolen Curl to an Emotional Wave
title_full_unstemmed From a Woolen Curl to an Emotional Wave
title_short From a Woolen Curl to an Emotional Wave
title_sort from a woolen curl to an emotional wave
topic etymology
wool
Bulgarian
Russian
Macedonian
Romanian
url https://www.gup.ugal.ro/ugaljournals/index.php/across/article/view/7560
work_keys_str_mv AT nicolaestanciu fromawoolencurltoanemotionalwave