Finden Sie Englisch Lehrkräfte
julien
Is "Spaniard" an old-fashioned term?
According to the 6th edition of the Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English for Advanced Learners, the term "Spaniard" is old-fashioned.
Do you agree or would you rather speak from "Spanish person/man/woman"?
Thanks!
7. Jan. 2019 21:15
Antworten · 7
1
yes Spaniard is an old form we now usually say The person is Spanish or a Spanish person. The term Spaniard to some has a negative connotation.
7. Januar 2019
1
I agree that it is a least less common than the alternatives, and maybe it is a bit old-fashioned. At least in the US, it would be much more common to say “he is from Spain” or “she is Spanish.”
7. Januar 2019
Yes, it is quite old-fashioned.
In fact, most of the demonyms which are exclusively nouns are rather old-fashioned - Englishman, Scotsman, Frenchman, Dutchman and so on. And to a lesser extent, Turk, Swede, Finn, and Dane.
These slightly outdated terms also have the disadvantage that they tend to refer only to men. When I hear the word 'Spaniard', this conjures up an rather old-fashioned image of a Spanish man - not a woman.
There are many nationalities ending in 'n' (Brazilian, Korean, Italian etc) which are both adjectives and nouns. With these nationalities, it's common to use boths forms : two Canadians or two Canadian tourists, for example. The same goes for nationalities ending in 'i' ( Iraqi, for example)
But for nationalities which don't end in 'n' or 'i', it's always preferable to use an adjective to refer to a person's nationality - a Spanish person, a French woman, a Dutch student and so on. And, of course, there are other nationalities which only have adjectival forms (Japanese, for example).
I hope that helps.
7. Januar 2019
It's relatively common in New Zealand - but in a different context: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aciphylla_colensoi
7. Januar 2019
Haben Sie noch keine Antworten gefunden?
Geben Sie Ihre Fragen ein und lassen Sie sich von Muttersprachlern helfen!
julien
Sprachfähigkeiten
Niederländisch, Englisch, Französisch, Deutsch
Lernsprache
Niederländisch, Englisch, Deutsch
Artikel, die Ihnen gefallen könnten

The Power of Storytelling in Business Communication
43 positive Bewertungen · 9 Kommentare

Back-to-School English: 15 Must-Know Phrases for the Classroom
31 positive Bewertungen · 6 Kommentare

Ten Tourist towns in Portugal that nobody remembers
59 positive Bewertungen · 23 Kommentare
Weitere Artikel