koine
English
    
WOTD – 21 November 2012
    Alternative forms
    
Etymology
    
Borrowed from Ancient Greek κοινή (koinḗ), feminine form of κοινός (koinós, “common, general”).
Pronunciation
    
- IPA(key): /ˈkɔɪniː/, /ˈkɔɪneɪ/
- Audio (UK) - (file) 
 
Noun
    
koine (plural koines or koinai)
- A lingua franca.
- Synonym: interlanguage
 -  2004, Steven Roger Fischer, A History of Language, Reaktion Books, page 178:- If a dominant language was spoken in the area of such trade routes, then this dominant language became the ‘interlanguage’, as it is called. Such an interlanguage, or koiné, is a simplified dialect with which speakers of two or more quite different dialects communicate with one another.
 
-  2013, J. E. Wansborough, Lingua Franca in the Mediterranean, Routledge, page 153:- Now, another term for that product is koine, which, however, I have regularly […] employed in reference to the infrastructure (procedural, juridical, formal, cultural) that enables and informs composition of a lingua franca. […] In linguistic scholarship koine mostly (!) refers to a standard language expanded by input from several dialectal sources with concomitant levelling of morphological and syntactic differences and adoption of a general and possibly restricted lexicon.
 
 
- A regional language that becomes standard over time.
Derived terms
    
- koinëisation (linguistics)
Translations
    
lingua franca
Further reading
    
 koiné language on  Wikipedia.Wikipedia koiné language on  Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Norwegian Bokmål
    
    Noun
    
koine m (definite singular koineen, indefinite plural koineer, definite plural koineene)
- alternative spelling of koiné
Norwegian Nynorsk
    
    Noun
    
koine m (definite singular koineen, indefinite plural koinear, definite plural koineane)
- alternative spelling of koiné
Romanian
    
    
Declension
    
 declension of koine (singular only) 
| singular | ||
|---|---|---|
| f gender | indefinite articulation | definite articulation | 
| nominative/accusative | (o) koine | [[{{{def}}}#Romanian|{{{def}}}]] | 
| genitive/dative | (unei) [[{{{pl}}}#Romanian|{{{pl}}}]] | [[{{{pl}}}i#Romanian|{{{pl}}}i]] | 
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