English edit

Etymology edit

From natio(n) +‎ -lect. The first component is from Latin nātiōn(em), with the second abbreviated from dialect, from Ancient Greek. Coined by Godelieve Laureys in 1997.[1]

Noun edit

natiolect (plural natiolects)

  1. A national standard variety of a language spoken in more than one region.

References edit

  1. ^ Van Keymeulen, J. (2016 December 30) “Dialect lexicography”, in International Handbook of Modern Lexis and Lexicography[1], Berlin: Springer:Laureys (1997) coined the useful term natiolect for “a national standard of a language that is spoken in more than one state.” Natiolects exist all over the world, e.g., Belgian Dutch, Austrian German ...