Talk:голодомор

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Latest comment: 2 years ago by Gnosandes in topic голодомор
Jump to navigation Jump to search

голодомор[edit]

@Tetromino: Can we give the word голодомор a political connotation, something like political jargon? GBNV for 2009 records a small rise in the graph in the late 50s, apparently, this is “[В]ынужденный переезд семьи (отцу, как бывшему под оккупацией, не нашлось работы в Полтаве, да и традиционный для Украины «голодомор» донимал) в далёкую Киргизию, где в небольшом городке Кок-Янгак он закончил среднее образование и в 1948 г. поступил на факультет языка и литературы педагогического института, преобразованного впоследствии в Киргизский государственный университет[.]”. I emphasize that the word is taken in quotation marks. In 1965, it is also found in "Вопросы языкознания" as a semantics to the Greek word. From 1985 to 2008, a sharp growth begins, and then a fall, then from 2014, the growth in the graph begins again (GBNV for 2019).

If we use the binding to dates, then this word is clearly political here. I noticed that this word was used in 2003 for the Great Famine (Ireland). In addition, I have not once seen the use of this word for famines 1024, 1070, 1092, 1121, 1128, 1214-1215, 1230-1231, 1279, 1309, 1332, 1422, 1442, 1512, 1553, 1557, 1570, 1601, 1602, 1608, 1630, 1636, 1650, 1733-1735, 1822, 1833, 1840, 1873, 1880, 1883, 1891-1892-1911 years. It can be noted that after 1947 (if you remove the war, then since 1933), there is no famine to this day. Can you add more data? Gnosandes (talk) 18:58, 23 August 2021 (UTC)Reply