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Kinship terms

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Kinship terms are the terminology used in many genealogical charts to describe relatives of the subject in question. These words make up the culture's kinship vocabulary, also known as the "kin terminological system".

Genealogical Abbreviations

Kin terminology

Kinship terminologies are most frequently subdivided into four major types:

With lineal kinship terminology the lineal relatives are distinguished from the collateral ones (for example, father and father's brother are denoted with different terms). On the other hand, maternal relatives are not distinguished from paternal relatives (for example, mother's sister and father's sister are denoted with the same term, e.g. "aunt" in English). This system looks perfectly natural for most Europeans, and indeed it is prevalent in most of modern European languages, but also, for example among the !Kung of the Kalahari, or the Inuit (Eskimo) - that is why it is frequently denoted as the "Inuit", or "Eskimo" kinship terminology. However, the lineal kinship terminology is not attested in most languages of the world, where other kinship terminology are used.

With bifurcate collateral kinship terminologies the lineal relatives are also distinguished from the collateral ones. But, on the other hand, maternal relatives ARE distinguished from paternal relatives (for example, mother's sister and father's sister are denoted with different terms, e.g. "kha:lah" and "`ammah" in Arabic) - this phenomenon is called "bifurcation". The languages with such kinship terminologies are even more rare than the ones using lineal kinship terms, but they could hardly be called "rare", as these lenguages (like Chinese, or Arabic) include some that are spoken by really large numbers of people. Bifurcate collateral kinship terminologies comprise the largest numbers of kinship terms (that could exceed 400 in some versions of Chinese).

With bifurcate merging kinship terminologies the lineal relatives are NOT distinguished from the collateral ones (for example, mather and mother's sister are denoted with one term). On the other hand, maternal relatives ARE distinguished from paternal relatives. This kinship terminologies are often subdivided into Iroquois, Omaha, and Crow subtypes.

Finally, with generational ("Hawaiian") kinship terminologies the lineal relatives are NOT distinguished from the collateral ones (for example, mather and mother's sister are denoted with one term). On the other hand, maternal relatives are NOT distinguished from paternal relatives either.

References

Sources

[MNSU]

 


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