Relaciones de bienes y geografía lingüística del siglo XVII.
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.58576/cilengua.vi7.120Keywords:
lexicography, geographical linguistics, corpus, historical lexicon, diatopicAbstract
The article studies the vocabulary of daily life in a corpus
of unpublished lists of personal assets from the 17th century, and
explores the value of this kind of evidence for research on the historical
lexicon from a diatopic perspective. The corpus is useful for
locating areas where new words (bombasí, biombo, cuja, limiste, pegoste)
are employed and areas that still preserve obsolete items
(cócedra, hirma, arrelde, quilma). At the same time, a comparison of lexical resources from different sources allows for the identification
of the range of expansion of inherited terms in the Spanish Golden
Age: masera, zaranda, brega, cerristopa, camizo, vánova, lichera, cociol
and bieldo.