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Diahrona pomenska stabilnost nekaterih najstarejših slovenskih pravnih izrazov in performativ
ID Škrubej, Katja (Author)

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Abstract
Prispevek najprej opiše pomen starih domačih diahrono pomensko stabilnih pravnih izrazov kot vira za preučevanje poimenovanih realij, in sicer na primeru najstarejših zabeležb članov besedne družine soditi, zbranih ob sistematičnem pregledu najstarejših virov v slovenskem jeziku (Brižinski spomeniki, srednjeveški rokopisi, Dalmatinova Biblija in najstarejši večjezični slovarji, ki so upoštevali tudi slovenski jezik). Osrednji del prispevka odgovarja na vprašanje, kako in zakaj so se nekateri stari pravni izrazi lahko ohranili pomensko stabilni do danes. Predstavljen je tudi predlog sheme najstarejših domačih poimenovanj za paradigmatska dejanja in vloge v sodnem postopku. Oblikovani sta dve sklepni ugotovitvi. Prva je, da so sodni zbori srednjeveških in novoveških avtonomnih skupnosti predstavljali tisto stabilno pomenotvorno okolje, v okviru katerega so se ob daleč prevladujoči ustni pravni komunikaciji lahko nekateri pravnorelevantni izrazi celo naravno terminologizirali. Druga ugotovitev, ki je predstavljena v obliki hipoteze za nadaljnje interdisciplinarno raziskovanje, pa je, da so se tako dolgo kot pomensko relativno stabilni verjetno lažje ohranili tisti performativni in zatrjevalni izreki, ki so bili kot pravna in hkrati govorna dejanja nujni za ustno pravno komunikacijo in ki so še danes nepogrešljivi pri ustni sodni obravnavi, pa tudi pri ustnem sklepanju pogodb.

Language:Slovenian
Keywords:slovenščina, pravo, pravna terminologija, pravna zgodovina, jezik, sodni postopek, pravno izrazje, Brižinski spomeniki, teorija govornih dejanj, ustna komunikacija, performativ, performativno pravo
Typology:1.16 - Independent Scientific Component Part or a Chapter in a Monograph
Organization:FF - Faculty of Arts
Year:2007
Number of pages:Str. 247-261
PID:20.500.12556/RUL-155529 This link opens in a new window
UDC:811.163.6'373.46:34"09/17"
COBISS.SI-ID:8996433 This link opens in a new window
Publication date in RUL:05.04.2024
Views:29
Downloads:0
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Record is a part of a monograph

Title:Razvoj slovenskega strokovnega jezika
Editors:Irena Orel
Place of publishing:Ljubljana
Publisher:Filozofska fakulteta, Oddelek za slovenistiko, Center za slovenščino kot drugi/tuji jezik
Year:2007
ISBN:978-961-237-193-7
COBISS.SI-ID:232729856 This link opens in a new window
Collection title:Obdobja
Collection numbering:24

Secondary language

Language:English
Abstract:
In the first part of the article, the value of the old vernacular semantically stable legal lexica as the historical source for studying the realia with which it is named is described and illustrated with the example of the oldest recordings of the lexical items pertaining to the word family soditi, gathered systematically from the oldest sources in Slovene (the Freising Manuscripts, Middle Age manuscripts in Slovene, Dalmatin's Bible and from the old multilingual dictionaries that included Slovene). The main research question, i.e. how it was at all possible for some of the oldest vernacular legal lexis to have remained relatively semantically stable until today, is elaborated in the second part. In continuation, suggestions for the oldest reconstructed vernacular namings for paradigmatic legal acts and roles in a court procedure are introduced in diagrammatic form. Two conclusions are drawn. First, the court gatherings of the medieval and early modern autonomous communities are to be identified as the stable semantic environment for the construction of legally relevant meanings, within which, and thanks to the overwhelmingly oral communication (embedded in what some scholars call performative law), some of the old legally relevant lexica could even have undergone a process of terminologisation. Second, and still in the form of a hypothesis for future interdisciplinary research, it is concluded that from among different legally relevant vernacular lexica, it has been those performatives and constitutives that have remained semantically stable, which in their concurrent role as speech and legal acts were inherent to oral legal communication and which are indispensable in any oral court procedure or forming of an oral agreement even today.

Keywords:language, law, history, court procedure, legal terms, Freising Manuscripts, speech act theory, oral communication, performative, performative law

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