nouns - Is there a word for a vocabulary associated with a particular work of fiction?


In his Lord of the Rings, J.R.R. Tolkien coins the word "glitter" to be a collective noun for elves.


In his books about Wonderland, Louis Carol invents an absolute mountain of words, words like "frabjous," meaning "great, wonderful, fabulous," and "boojum," meaning an especially dangerous variety of "snark," another invented word.


In Star Wars, we have terms like "tie fighter," a kind of spacecraft, and lightsaber, a kind of weapon.


Harry Potter, Star Trek, A Song of Fire and Ice (A Game of Thrones), Battlestar Galactica, Stargate, The Chronicles of Narnia... And the list goes on. These are all similar examples of works that incorporate their own subset of English words, some entirely original and some that alter standard English definitions.


Given that there are so many authors that do this in their works, is there any word that means a special set of words whose definitions are specific to and used by a specific work or works, particularly fiction?



Answer



Perhaps
- Argot or - Jargon


See this StackExchange discussion of Argot and Jargon: https://linguistics.stackexchange.com/questions/2812/argot-vs-jargon


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

etymology - Origin of "s--t eating grin"

First floor vs ground floor, usage origin

usage - "there doesn't seem" vs. "there don't seem"

pronunciation - Where does the intrusive R come from in “warsh”?

Abbreviation of "Street"

etymology - Since when has "a hot minute" meant a long time?

meaning - What is synonyme of "scale"?