Community Corner
Michigan Man Invents New Word: Your Siblings' Kids Are Your 'Sofralia'
An Oakland County rabbi and lawyer hopes the portmanteau-inspired "sofralia" will succeed where "nibling" and "niephling" failed.

Imagine youβre having this conversation with Stephen Schneur Polter, a rabbi and attorney from Oak Park, and he casually asks:
βHave you seen your sofralia today?β
Baffled, you wonder if sofralia β pronounced soe-FRAIL-yah β about a souffle of some sort.Should you fake it and remark that it was delicious? Better play it safe.
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βHave I seen my what?β you ask.
βYour nieces and nephews. Have you seen them?
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βOh, yes,β you say. βWhy didnβt you just say that?β
In a word, Polter did.
He coined sofralia to collectively refer to nieces and nephews, and he hopes the word will one day be as common as parents and siblings, the Detroit Free Press reports.
Ultimately, Polter hopes sofralia will make it into the Merriam-Webster dictionary, which adds new words and terms based on their usage, including Michigan-favorite βda βYoopersβ β to describe residents of the Upper Peninsula, and βselfieβ and βhashtag.β
But it wasnβt a place etymological history that motivated Polter. Saying nieces and nephews β and Polter has, combined, 90 sofralia and great-sofralia β became redundant.
βIt was simply out of frustration, whereby I felt there was no collective term for that β nephews and nieces,β he said. βI played around with the Greek, Latin, prefixes, suffixes. It didnβt take a long time.β
Related:
Polter made a footnote pitch to those who read his fourth self-published book, βGod Is Great: Setting he Record Straight,β which is available on Amazon.com, where he explained the origin of the word:
βSorority is the Latin term for sister. Fraternity is the Latin term for brother. Phile or Philia or Filia is the Latin term for child. Thus if we take the first syllables of βsororityβ and βfraternityβ, and the final syllable of βphiliaβ, we get βsofraliaβ. In other words, children of brothers and sisters, i.e. nephews and nieces.β
Donβt Like Sofralia? How About Geschwisterkind?
University of Michigan professor of Greek and Latin Ruth Scodel told the Free Press Polterβs new word is nonsensical.
βThis doesnβt make sense. This is an invented word based on Latin words, but itβs not a Latin formation. ... Itβs a made-up word and itβs OK to make up words. If he wants to, fine. But no one would get much help from Latin for this,β Scodel said. βIf we felt the need for his word, we wouldβve probably created it.β
So far, it looks like the public agrees.
Polter admits his campaign to popularize sofralia is falling flat.
βI havenβt gotten much momentum,β Polter said. βI donβt have much occasion to use the word, but when I do, I definitely use it. Others that have read the book or know I came up with this word are quite impressed. I donβt know if they use it.β
If sofralia doesnβt catch on, Polter is in good company. In 1951, linguist Samuel Martin suggested βnibling,β a play on βsibling,β for nieces and nephews. It didnβt catch on. (Perhaps because it reminded people of young corn?)Β Neither did βniephling,β sometimes spelled βniefling.β
Oh, well.
Thereβs always βgeschwisterkind,β the gender-neutral German word that Scodel prefers to describe nieces and nephews.
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Photo licensed under Creative Commons
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