Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- To the reader
- Introduction
- Gestures & Signals
- Customs & Behaviours
- Names & Addresses
- What's so good about it? the curious nature of ‘good-’ greetings
- Ahoy, ahoy! Pick up the phone! ‘hello’ and its uses
- The unlucky Mr Szczęściarz: foreign names in foreign places
- Wang is King in China: too many people, not enough names
- Finding Björk: Icelandic names
- Yoo-hoo! Who? You! how Swedes don't address each other
- Mister Doctor: titles of medicos, surgeons and barbers
- I forget my name: loss of first name by marriage
- When your coz is your sis: kinship terms
- You, thou and other politenesses: familiar and polite ‘you’
- Include me out! dual, trial and other grammatical curiosities
- For me to know and you to find out: naming and name taboos
- Bye-bye! how things have changed
- Postscript
- Notes
- Sources
- Index
When your coz is your sis: kinship terms
from Names & Addresses
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 February 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- To the reader
- Introduction
- Gestures & Signals
- Customs & Behaviours
- Names & Addresses
- What's so good about it? the curious nature of ‘good-’ greetings
- Ahoy, ahoy! Pick up the phone! ‘hello’ and its uses
- The unlucky Mr Szczęściarz: foreign names in foreign places
- Wang is King in China: too many people, not enough names
- Finding Björk: Icelandic names
- Yoo-hoo! Who? You! how Swedes don't address each other
- Mister Doctor: titles of medicos, surgeons and barbers
- I forget my name: loss of first name by marriage
- When your coz is your sis: kinship terms
- You, thou and other politenesses: familiar and polite ‘you’
- Include me out! dual, trial and other grammatical curiosities
- For me to know and you to find out: naming and name taboos
- Bye-bye! how things have changed
- Postscript
- Notes
- Sources
- Index
Summary
Do you have a jiubiaoxiong? There is a good chance you have, but perhaps weren't aware of it. The Chinese use this word for ‘my mother's brother's son who is older than I am’.
How far can kinship terms go?
When it comes to kinship words, English is fairly meagre. Your uncle and aunt can be on your mother's side or your father's. Grandparents fall in the same ambiguous category. A cousin is a cousin, without giving the side of the family or the cousin's sex. The words ‘nephew’ and ‘niece’ give the sex but not the lineage. In addition, your aunt's husband is almost automatically called your uncle, although he is not, just as your blood-related uncle's wife becomes your aunt for lack of anything else to call her.
When it comes to kinship systems, there are several types, first devised in 1871 by the American ethnologist and anthropologist Louis Henry Morgan and further refined by many others. Morgan first classified kinship systems into two main groups: classificatory and descriptive. In the simplest of terms, an example of the classificatory type is ‘grandparent’, while an example of the descriptive type has separate words for ‘father's mother’, ‘father's father’, ‘mother's mother’, ‘mother's father’ and so on.
Morgan then proceeded to divide each of the two main groups into sub-systems, depending on how various peoples viewed their relations.
FROM SIMPLE…
One of the simplest of all is the ‘Hawaiian model’, which is of the classificatory type.
In this kinship system, there are no uncles or aunts, and no cousins.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Tales of Hi and ByeGreeting and Parting Rituals Around the World, pp. 179 - 186Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009