Hyperforeignism


A hyperforeignism is a type of qualitative hypercorrection that involves speakers misidentifying the distribution of a pattern found in loanwords and extending it to other environments, including words and phrases not borrowed from the language that the pattern derives from. The result of this process does not reflect the rules of either language. For example, habanero is sometimes pronounced as though it were spelled with an , which is not the Spanish form from which the English word was borrowed.
Hyperforeignisms can manifest in a number of ways, including the application of the spelling or pronunciation rules of one language to a word borrowed from another, an incorrect application of a language's pronunciation, and pronouncing loanwords as though they were borrowed more recently. Hyperforeignisms may similarly occur when a word is thought to be a loanword from a particular language when it is not.
Although similar, words that exhibit deliberate language-play are not, strictly speaking, hyperforeignisms. These are, instead, a way of poking fun at those who earnestly adopt foreign-sounding pronunciations of pseudo-loanwords.
Similarly, speakers who echo hyperforeign pronunciations without the intention of approximating a foreign-language pattern are also not practicing hyperforeignization; thus, pronouncing habanero as if it were spelled habañero is not a hyperforeignism if one is not aware that the word has been borrowed from Spanish.

English

In English, hyperforeignisms are seen in loanwords from many different languages. Many examples of hyperforeignisms are isolated examples, rather than ones showing a particular pattern applied to multiple words and phrases, though some patterns can be identified.
Replacement with postalveolar fricatives and is one common mark of hyperforeignisms in English. This leads to pronouncing smörgåsbord as, parmesan as , and Mandarin Chinese terms like Beijing with :.

Dutch words

In Dutch, the letter combination represents at the beginning of a syllable, and at the end. However, most English speakers pronounce Dutch words such as Rooibosch and veldschoen with, more closely following the pronunciation rules for German spelling. In contrast, certain well-established Dutch surnames and place names in the United States dating to colonial times, such as Schuyler, have pronounced as, which is relatively closer to the Dutch pronunciation.

French words

A number of words of French origin feature a final that is pronounced in English but silent in the original language. For example, the noun cache is sometimes pronounced, as though it were spelled either or . In French, the final is silent and the word is pronounced. The word cadre is sometimes pronounced in English, as though it were of Spanish origin. In French, the final is silent and a common English pronunciation is.
Legal English is replete with words derived from Norman French, which for a long time was the language of the courts in England and Wales. The correct pronunciation of Norman French is often closer to a natural contemporary English reading than to modern French: the attempt to pronounce these phrases as if they were modern French could therefore be considered to be a hyperforeignism. For example, the clerk's summons "Oyez!" is commonly pronounced ending in a consonant, or.
A common pattern is pronouncing French loanwords without a word-final, as with derrière, peignoir, and répertoire. Yet at once, this is a normal pronunciation in French vernacular of North America : /r/ is optional as word ending, whereas the vowel just behind it is always long, contrasting with vowels being almost always short in real word ending positions.
Another common pattern, influenced by French morphophonology, is the omission of word-final consonants. Hyperforeign application of this tendency occurs with omission of these consonants in words with final consonants that are pronounced in French. This occurs notably in the term coup de grâce, in which some speakers omit the final consonant, although it is pronounced in French as ; omitting this consonant instead sounds like coup de gras, meaning a nonsensical "blow of fat". Other examples of this include Vichyssoise, the chess term ', ', and mise en scène. There are many instances of this sort of omission connected with proper nouns. Some speakers may omit pronouncing a final or in names such as Saint-Saëns, Duras, Boulez, and Berlioz, though these words are pronounced in French with a final or.
The Norman French language furthermore gave Southern England some ancient family names that were once associated with the aristocracy. An example is Lestrange which is sometimes pronounced with its natural and contemporaneous French inflection, though it is more often pronounced like the English word strange,.
Speakers of American English typically pronounce lingerie, depressing the first vowel of the French to sound more like a "typical" French nasal vowel, and rhyming the final syllable with English ray, by analogy with the many French loanwords ending in,,, and. Similarly, the French-derived term repartie was changed to English spelling , giving rise to a hyperforeign.
Claret is often pronounced, without a final. However, it is historically an Anglicised version of the original French clairet, with the more typically being pronounced and the stress falling on the first syllable:.
Moët, a brand of French champagne, is often wrongly pronounced with a silent "t". The name is Dutch and so the correct pronunciation is "mo-ette" or "mo-wett" ].

Indian-language words

The in the name of the Taj Mahal or raj is often rendered, but a closer approximation to the Hindi sound is. The in most words associated with languages of India is more accurately approximated as.
Another example is the pronunciation of Punjab as ; a closer approximation to the original is. This spelling of "Punjab" dates to British colonial rule and is intended to be pronounced according to English spelling rules, as with other words borrowed from Indian languages into English, such as curry, suttee, and mulligatawny, or other colonial-era names ; a closer Romanization of the name is Panjāb, from Persian for 'five waters'.

Italian words

The in Adagio may be realized as, even though the "soft" of Italian represents an affricate. Similarly, English-speaking musicians render the Italian word mezzo as, as in the commonly used Italian loan-word pizza, though the Italian pronunciation is, with a voiced, rather than a voiceless.
The name of the principal male character in Shakespeare's The Taming of the Shrew is spelled, intended to be the Italian name Petruccio, reflecting more conventional English pronunciation rules that use to represent. However, the name is commonly pronounced, as though Shakespeare's spelling is genuinely Italian.
Substituting baristo for a male barista, when in fact barista is invariable in gender in Italian and Spanish is a hyperforeignism. In Italian, the gender is indicated by the article; il barista for a male and la barista for a female.
The word latte, as in caffè latte, is often misspelled as or, implying stress on the final syllable. However, latte has no accent mark in Italian and has the stress on the first syllable. This may be an analogy with French words such as frappé, where there is such an accent mark.
Italian, as in maraschino, bruschetta, or the brand name Freschetta, is often mispronounced as English rather than the correct , due to greater familiarity with the German pronunciation of.

Russian words

Because the Russian loanword dacha looks like it could be German, the pronunciation, with a velar fricative, shows an attempt at marking a word as foreign, but with a sound not originally present in the source word. The more common pronunciation is, which sounds closer to the original Russian word.

Spanish words

The digraph of Spanish generally represents, similar to English. Hyperforeign realizations of many Spanish loanwords or proper names may substitute other sounds. Examples include a French-style in the surname Chávez and in Che Guevara, or a German-influenced or Ancient Greek-influenced in machismo. The in the Spanish word chorizo is sometimes realized as by English speakers, reflecting more closely the pronunciation of the double letter in Italian and Italian loanwords in English. This is not the pronunciation of present-day Spanish, however. Rather, the in chorizo represents or in Spanish.
Some English speakers pronounce certain words of Spanish origin as if they had an eñe when they do not in the original language. For example, the word habanero is pronounced in Spanish. English speakers may instead pronounce it, as if it were spelled ; the phenomenon also occurs with empanada, which may be pronounced as if spelled. The city of Cartagena, Colombia is very commonly pronounced as if it were spelled.
The South American beverage, mate, is frequently spelled in English, adding an accent which, in Spanish, changes the pronunciation and meaning of the word. The accented spelling may however serve a purpose, as it is interpreted by some English speakers to indicate that the word has two syllables and is not pronounced like the English word mate. Following Spanish orthography though, the only 'correct' place to add an accent which matches the natural stress of the word would be as "máte".

Other languages

Polish

Hyperforeignisms occur in Polish sometimes with English loanwords or names. One example would be the name Roosevelt, which is pronounced, as if it started like goose, even though a natural Polish pronunciation would be closer to the English one.
Phenian, now obsolete name for Pyongyang, which was a transcription of Russian Пхеньян, was pronounced, as if 'ph' represented voiceless labiodental fricative like in English.
Loanwords from Japanese are often subject to hyperforeignism. The names of three of the four main islands of Japan, Honsiu, Kiusiu, and Sikoku, are already Polish transcriptions with close approximations of Japanese sounds –,,, but are often pronounced with changing native into "foreign". Other Japanese words use English transcription, which causes further problems. Tsunami, which in original Japanese has the sound, present in Polish, is pronounced with effort to separate and, since it sounds more "foreign".

Russian

In Russian, many early loanwords are pronounced as native Russian words with full palatalization. Hyperforeignism occurs when some speakers pronounce these early loanwords without palatalization. For example: is normally pronounced. A hyperforeign pronunciation would be, as if the word were spelled. Similarly, is pronounced, with the hyperforeign pronunciation being, as if it were spelled. Other examples include >, > and . The variation is attributable to the tendency to use in foreign words after a consonant, even if it is not palatalized.

Swedish

In Swedish chèvre is sometimes pronounced as "chevré", quite differently from the original French .
In French this would give it a meaning like goated.
Similarly entrecôte, which can often be spelled, or, or some other combination of and or. More often than not, it is pronounced without a final.

Norwegian

Like in Swedish, in Norwegian the entrecôte can be pronounced without the final. This might also happen in pommes frites, and the is often removed in the pronunciation of Béarnaise sauce.