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loanword

American  
[lohn-wurd] / ˈloʊnˌwɜrd /
Or loan word

noun

  1. a word in one language that has been borrowed from another language and usually naturalized, as wine, taken into Old English from Latin vinum, or macho, taken into Modern English from Spanish.


Etymology

Origin of loanword

1870–75; translation of German Lehnwort

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

The sheer clip at which English words rotate in and out of the vernacular has made it difficult for any statistic to accurately capture the scale of loanword creep.

From Los Angeles Times • Feb. 3, 2025

Local journalists describe the scenes here as the local telenovela, a Spanish loanword meaning soap opera.

From Time • Oct. 27, 2017

Sadly, these words failed to stick, and nowadays one is forced to answer wrong numbers on a loanword: tilifun.

From The New Yorker • Apr. 10, 2017

By the way, I knew the difference between a loanword and a calque and the Defiant Ones, but not what was going on in the car with Giardia.

From Slate • Mar. 8, 2013

The Gael. busgainnich, to dress, to adorn, is a loanword from O. N.

From Scandinavian influence on Southern Lowland Scotch by Flom, George Tobias

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