perintegrate

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Back-formation from perintegration.

Verb[edit]

perintegrate (third-person singular simple present perintegrates, present participle perintegrating, simple past and past participle perintegrated)

  1. (linguistics) To undergo perintegration.
    • 1956, Stanisław Westfal, A Study in Polish Morphology: The Genitive Singular Masculine:
      las-anek has been modelled upon sasanek, -nka, 'anemone' or 'pulsatilla' (D.), for which D. has quotations from Konopnicka, Lenartowicz, and Sienkiewicz (the fem. sasanka, though not attested by any examples in D., seems to be the normal form now); sasanek has been falsely perintegrated, cf. Sas, 'a Saxon', and the suffix -an-ek/-an-k- derived therefrom;
    • 1985, Acta Societatis Linguisticae Europaeae, page 204:
      Another perintegrated morph of adjective in Present-Day Russian is -ONN-.
    • 1996, Arleta Adamska-Sałaciak, Language Change in the Works of Kruszewski, Baudouin de Courtenay, and Rozwadowski, page 108:
      As will be remembered, combinatroy sound change is guaranteed by the 'static law of sound combinations', i.e. by the fact that neighbouring souncs (complex entities, made up of various articulatory activities) influence each other (their articulatory and acoustic features 'perintegrate'); morphological and semantic change proceed in accordance with the psychological laws of association, whose operation, due to the human factor is less regular and less predictable.
    • 2002, Paul Wexler, Two-tiered Relexification in Yiddish, →ISBN:
      Occasionally, Slavic languages become incorporated or “perintegrated” with neighboring Slavic languages by sharing the innovations of the latter, see e.g. (1) the Kajkavian dialect of Serbo-Croatian, which is of Slovene origin, or (g) Kashubian which has become attached to Polish; such languages are also multilayered.