這種新世界的鳥(niǎo)類為什么會(huì)以半個(gè)地球外的國(guó)家的名字來(lái)命名。
Within the turkey lies the tangled history of theworld.
在土耳其境內(nèi)有著錯(cuò)綜復(fù)雜的世界歷史。
OK, not quite. But not far off, either.
好吧,或許并非如此,但也相差無(wú)幾了。
"Turkey" the bird is native to North America. But "turkey" the word is a geographic mess—atribute to the vagaries of colonial trade and conquest. As you might have suspected, theEnglish term for the avian creature likely comes from Turkey the country. Or, more precisely,from Turkish merchants in the 15th and 16th centuries.
"火雞"這種鳥(niǎo)是原產(chǎn)于北美洲。但是"turkey"一詞來(lái)源是一種地理上的大雜燴 — — 是對(duì)殖民地貿(mào)易和征服的異想天開(kāi)的獻(xiàn)禮。你可能認(rèn)為這種鳥(niǎo)類的英文名字可能來(lái)自于土耳其這個(gè)國(guó)家的名字?;蛘撸_切地說(shuō),從第十五和十六世紀(jì)的土耳其商人那里得名。
How exactly the word "turkey" made its way into the English language is in dispute. Thelinguist Mario Pei theorized that more than five centuries ago, Turks from the commercial hubof Constantinople (which the Ottomans conquered in the mid-15th century) sold wild fowl fromGuinea in West Africa to European markets, leading the English to refer to the bird as "turkeycock" or "turkey coq" (coq being French for "rooster”), and eventually "turkey" for short.When British settlers arrived in Massachusetts, they applied the same terms to the wild fowlthey spotted in the New World, even though the birds were a different species than theirAfrican counterparts. The etymology expert Mark Forsyth, meanwhile, claims that Turkishtraders brought guinea fowl to England from Madagascar, off the coast of southeast Africa, andthat Spanish conquistadors then introduced American fowl to Europe, where they wereconflated with the "turkeys" from Madagascar. Dan Jurafsky, another linguist, argues thatEuropeans imported guinea fowl from Ethiopia (which was sometimes mixed up with India) viathe Mamluk Turks, and then confused the birds with North American fowl shipped across theAtlantic by the Portuguese.
“土耳其”這個(gè)單詞如何出現(xiàn)在英語(yǔ)語(yǔ)言中依然有爭(zhēng)議。語(yǔ)言學(xué)家Mario 裴理推測(cè)大概在五個(gè)多世紀(jì)前,君士坦丁堡這個(gè)商業(yè)中心的土耳其人 (在15 世紀(jì)中葉被土耳其人征服)將來(lái)自西非幾內(nèi)亞的野禽(即珍珠雞)賣到歐洲市場(chǎng) ,所以那時(shí)的英國(guó)人稱這種鳥(niǎo)為"土耳其公雞",并最終以"土耳其"來(lái)簡(jiǎn)稱這種動(dòng)物。當(dāng)英國(guó)移民抵達(dá)(美國(guó))馬薩諸塞州時(shí),在這塊新大陸上他們用同一個(gè)詞來(lái)稱呼他們?cè)谶@片土地上看到的野禽,盡管這里的野禽不同于非洲的那種。詞源學(xué)專家馬克福賽思說(shuō)土耳其商人把幾內(nèi)亞的這種野禽從馬達(dá)加斯加帶到英國(guó),而西班牙征服者把美洲的野禽引到歐洲,所以就和來(lái)自馬達(dá)加斯加的“土耳其”混合在一起了。丹 Jurafsky,另一個(gè)語(yǔ)言學(xué)家,認(rèn)為歐洲人通過(guò)馬穆魯克土耳其人從埃塞俄比亞 (有時(shí)候人們將埃塞俄比亞同印度混在一起了) 進(jìn)口幾內(nèi)亞野禽,然后與葡萄牙通過(guò)大西洋從北美進(jìn)口的野禽混淆在一起了。
The guinea fowl (left) vs.the North American turkey (Wikipedia)
珍珠雞(左圖)和北美火雞對(duì)比(圖片來(lái)源:維基百科)
Here's where things get even more bewildering. Turkey, which has no native turkeys, does notcall turkey "turkey." The Turks "knew the bird wasn't theirs," Forsyth explains, so they "madea completely different mistake and called it a hindi, because they thought the bird was probablyIndian." They weren't alone. The French originally called the American bird poulet d'Inde (literally"chicken from India"), which has since been abbreviated to dinde, and similar terms exist inlanguages ranging from Polish to Hebrew to Catalan. Then there's the oddly specific Dutchword kalkoen, which, as a contraction of Calicut-hoen, literally means "hen from Calicut," amajor Indian commercial center at the time. These names may have arisen from the mistakenbelief at the time that the New World was the Indies, or the sense that the turkey trade passedthrough India.
事情還要更復(fù)雜。土耳其當(dāng)?shù)貨](méi)有火雞,他們也不把火雞叫做“turkey”。他們“知道這玩意不是他們國(guó)家的“, 福賽斯是這么解釋的,因此他們犯了一個(gè)完全不同的錯(cuò)誤,把火雞叫做hindi(印度語(yǔ)的意思),因?yàn)樗麄冋J(rèn)為這玩意也許是印度的。有這種想法的人不止是土耳其人。法國(guó)人一開(kāi)始把這種美國(guó)雞稱為poulet d'Inde(字面意思為來(lái)自印度的雞),后來(lái)簡(jiǎn)稱為dinde,類似的稱謂也存在于波蘭語(yǔ)、希伯來(lái)語(yǔ)和加泰羅尼亞語(yǔ)中。還有一個(gè)非常奇怪的特定荷蘭語(yǔ)稱謂kalkoen,是從Calicut-hoen這個(gè)詞提煉出來(lái)的,字面意思是“來(lái)自卡利卡特的母雞”, 卡利卡特曾是印度的主要商業(yè)中心之一。這些名稱的來(lái)源也許是因?yàn)楫?dāng)時(shí)他們認(rèn)為新世界指的是西印度群島一帶,或者是認(rèn)為火雞貿(mào)易途徑印度。
So what is the bird called in India? It may be hindi in Turkey, but in Hindi it's arki. Some Indiandialects, however, use the word piru or peru, the latter being how the Portuguese refer to theAmerican fowl, which is not native to Peru but may have become popular in Portugal as Spanishand Portuguese explorers conquered the New World. The expansion of Western colonialismonly complicated matters: Malaysians call turkey ayam blander (“Dutch chicken”), whileCambodians opt for moan barang (“French chicken”).
那么火雞在印度被稱為什么呢?在土耳其他們稱之為hindi,但是在印度語(yǔ)里他們稱之為?arki。在一些印度方言里使用piru或者peru這個(gè)詞,后者是葡萄牙語(yǔ)對(duì)美國(guó)火雞的叫法,火雞的原產(chǎn)地不是秘魯,但是在西班牙和葡萄牙征服新大陸時(shí)在葡萄牙很受歡迎。西方殖民主義的擴(kuò)張使事情更加復(fù)雜:馬來(lái)西亞人把火雞叫做ayamblander(荷蘭雞的意思),緬甸人選擇了moan barang這個(gè)叫法(意思是法國(guó)雞)
Then there are the turkey truthers and linguistic revisionists. In the early 1990s, for instance,a debate broke out in the "letter to the editor" section of The New York Times over the possibleHebrew origins of the word "turkey." On December 13, 1992, Rabbi Harold M. Kamslersuggested (as a follow-up to a Thanksgiving-themed piece titled "One Strange Bird") that theNew World fowl received its English name from Christopher Columbus's interpreter, Luis deTorres, a Jewish convert to Catholicism. In an October 12, 1492 letter to a friend in Spain, deTorres had referred to the American bird he encountered as a tuki, the word for "peacock" inancient Hebrew and "parrot" in modern Hebrew (a more dubious version of this story claimsthat Columbus himself was a Jew who hid his identity in the aftermath of the SpanishInquisition but drew on his lineage to christen the fowl).
然后出現(xiàn)了火雞真相者和語(yǔ)言學(xué)上的修正主義者。比如在1990年代初期的時(shí)候,在《紐約時(shí)報(bào)》的“給編者的話”板塊上就引發(fā)了一場(chǎng)有關(guān)“火雞”這個(gè)詞可能來(lái)自希伯來(lái)語(yǔ)的可能性的爭(zhēng)論。1992年12月13號(hào),猶太拉比Harold M. Kamsler認(rèn)為這種新世界飛禽的英文名字源于航海家哥倫布的口譯人員 Luis de Torres(他是一名猶太人,后來(lái)皈依天主教)。在1492年12月12號(hào)給西班牙一位朋友的信件中, Luis de Torres將他在美國(guó)遇到的這種飛禽稱為tuki,在古希伯來(lái)文中指的是“孔雀”的意思以及在現(xiàn)代的希伯來(lái)文中指的是“鸚鵡”的意思(而在一個(gè)更加可疑的故事版本中稱哥倫布本人就是個(gè)猶太人,在西班牙宗教法庭建立后他隱藏了自己的身份,但是利用自己的血統(tǒng)為這種飛禽命名)。
Kamsler's letter, however, was met with a firm rebuttal from the president of the Associationfor the Study of Jewish Languages, David L Gold. "Rabbi Kamsler's explanation, not originalwith him, is an old yarn spun in uninformed Jewish circles," Gold wrote. "Along with countlessother pseudoscientific claims about supposed Hebrew influence on English and other languages,the myth of the Hebrew origin of 'turkey' was quietly exploded in volume 2 of Jewish LinguisticStudies (1990)."
Kamsler的看法遭到了猶太語(yǔ)言研究協(xié)會(huì)主席David L Gold的反駁。“拉比Kamsler的解釋簡(jiǎn)直胡說(shuō)八道??梢栽凇丢q太語(yǔ)言研究》的第二卷(1990)中找到證據(jù)證明:“火雞”這個(gè)詞并非來(lái)自希伯來(lái)語(yǔ)。
The turkey's scientific name doesn't make much more sense than its vernacular one. Itsbinomial nomenclature, Meleagris gallopavo, is a hodgepodge. The first name comes from aGreek myth in which the goddess Artemis turned the grieving sisters of the slain Meleager intoguinea fowls. The second name is a portmanteau: Gallo is derived from the Latin word forrooster, gallus, while pavo is the Latin word for peacock. So, effectively, the official name for aturkey is guinea-fowl-rooster-peacock.
火雞的科學(xué)命名并不比它的俗稱更有意義。雙名命名法,Meleagris gallopavo(吐綬雞),本來(lái)就是一個(gè)大雜燴。第一個(gè)詞來(lái)自于希臘神話:月亮女神阿耳忒彌斯將被殺死的梅利埃格的悲傷姐妹變成了珍珠雞(guineafowl)。第二個(gè)詞是一個(gè)混合詞:Gallo來(lái)源拉丁詞”公雞“,pavo來(lái)源拉丁詞”孔雀“。所以,最終,火雞的正式名稱就是:珍珠雞-公雞-孔雀(guinea-fowl-rooster-peacock)。
Reflecting on his interview with Mario Pei, NPR's Robert Krulwich noted that "for 500 yearsnow, this altogether American, very gallant if not particularly intelligent animal has never oncebeen given an American name." But the turkey does have many authentically American names—Americans just choose not to use them. After all, pre-Aztec and Aztec peoples domesticatedthe turkey more than a millennium before Columbus reached the New World (the Aztecs calledthe bird huehxolotl). There are numerous Native American words for the bird, including theBlackfoot term omahksipi'kssii, which literally means "big bird." It's a bit vague, sure, but itcertainly beats guinea-fowl-rooster-peacock.
回顧語(yǔ)言學(xué)家利奧-佩(Mario Pei)的采訪,美國(guó)國(guó)家公共電臺(tái)(NPR)的羅伯特-科爾維奇(RobertKrulwich)提到過(guò)”500年來(lái),所有美國(guó)人非常殷切期盼這種并不太聰明的動(dòng)物能有一個(gè)美國(guó)化的名字。”但是火雞卻有很多真正的美國(guó)名字,只是美國(guó)人沒(méi)選用而已。畢竟,在哥倫布到達(dá)新世界前,阿茲特克人馴養(yǎng)火雞(阿茲特克人稱火雞為“huehxolotl”)已經(jīng)超過(guò)一千年了。有很多原生美國(guó)詞匯形容這種鳥(niǎo),包括黑腳部族把它叫做“omahksipi'kssii”,意思是“大鳥(niǎo)”。這么叫是有點(diǎn)含糊,沒(méi)錯(cuò),但是確實(shí)好過(guò)“珍珠雞-公雞-孔雀(guinea-fowl-rooster-peacock)”。