Lect.6. Word-Formation
Lect.6. Word-Formation
Lecture 6.
Most often the new objects are named with the help of words already
existing in the language. What is meant here is change of meaning. It's the first
means of nomination.
Creation of new nominative units which may be words or word-groups - is
the other means of nomination. New words are never pure inventions, i.e. they are
never made up of nothing.
Very many words are borrowings, i.e. they are taken from other languages,
e.g., detente, sputnik.
Another way of nomination is split of polysemy, when the word is highly
polysemantic, some of its meanings are drift so far apart that the link between them
is lost. E.g. watch existed in OE, it meant "vigil" (бодрствование), then it meant
"people who were on guard'' (стража); 2. “a primitive device showing time”; 3.
"new instrument, more perfect, showing time". By and by "a primitive device..."
was forgotten, and the link between it and the "new instrument..." was forgotten;
now there are two homonymous words: watch - 1. vigil, 2. instrument showing
time.
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Another type of nomination is numerous abbreviations, e.g., YCL, exam,
p.m., a.m., etc.
Opposed to all these there is a way of nomination which is more important,
it is the creation of new words. (word-formation). E.g., bridge-builder,
neocolonialism, wage-freeze, minicar, writer. Some words are formed with the
help of suffixes or prefixes, i.e. the formation of new words out of morphological,
derivational elements existing in the language, after some definite patterns. This is
what is called word-formation – is a patterned, way of making new words out of
the material existing in the language. W-formation is one of the main means of
nomination. It differs from the other types of nomination because it's a patterned
way (some linguists are of opinion that abbreviation is patterned too, but its
patterns are different from those of word-formation).
Change of meaning and split of polysemy are closely connected.
Abbreviation is connected with patterned ways (according to some linguists). All
the ways of nomination are at the same time ways of replenishing of the
vocabulary, but word-formation is only one part of replenishing of the vocabulary.
The basic unit of the morphemic level is the morpheme. It is defined as the
smallest indivisible two-facet language unit. Two-facet here means an association
of a certain meaning with a certain sound-form (a morpheme is the smallest
meaningful unit of the language). Morphemes may be classified from a) the
semantic point of view, b) the structural point of view.
Semantically morphemes fall into two classes: root-morphemes and
affixational morphemes. Roots and affixational morphemes make two distinct
classes of morphemes due to the different roles they play in the word-structure.
The root-morpheme is a morpheme in which the lexical meaning is concentrated,
i.e. it's the lexical nucleus of the word. E.g., teach – in teach, teacher, teaching.
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Affixational morphemes are subdivided according to their position, into prefixes,
suffixes and infixes, and according to their function and meaning, into derivational
and functional affixes. A prefix preceeds the root-morpheme, a suffix follows it.
An infix is an affix placed within the word, like -n- in stand. The type is not
productive. Functional affixes serve to convey grammatical meaning; they build
different forms of one and the same word, e.g., near, nearer, nearest; son, son's,
sons, sons'. Derivational affixes form different words with different lexical and
lexico-grammatical meaning, e.g., foolish, foolishly, foolishness. Derivational and
functional morphemes may happen to be identical in sound form, but they are
substantially different in meaning and function. E.g., unwanted, “-ed” is not a
functional affix as in played, studied, but derivational. Lexicology is primarily
concerned with derivational affixes, the other group of functional affixes is the
domain of grammarians.
Structurally morphemes fall into three types: free morphemes, bound
morphemes, semi-free (semi-bound) morphemes.
A free-morpheme is defined as one that coincides with the stem or a word-
form (the stem is the part of the word which remains unchangeable throughout the
paradigm). A great many root-morphemes are free, that is those root morphemes
that coincide with the stem of the word, e.g., friendship.
A bound-morpheme exists only as a part of a word. Affixes are usually
considered to be bound-morphemes (-ness, -ize, -ship, dis-, de-), but many root-
morphemes, especially those of Greek or Romanic origin, are bound morphemes,
e.g., conceive, theoretical, barbarism.
Semi-bound (semi-free) morphemes are those that can function both as an
affix and as a free morpheme, e.g., well, half in well-known, to feel well, half-done,
half an hour.
The relationship between the two classes of morphemes discussed above can
be graphically presented in the following diagram:
The lower layer contains the ICs resulting from the first cut, the upper one
those from the second, the shaded boxes representing the ICs which are at the same
time the UCs of the word.
According to the number of morphemes words are classified into
monomorphic and polymorphic. Monomorphic or root-words consist of only one
root morpheme, e.g., small, dog, make, give. Polymorphic words according to the
number of root-morphemes are classified into two subgroups: monoradical (or one-
root words) and polyradical words, i.e. words which consist of two or more roots.
Monoradical words fall into two subtypes: 1) radical-suffixal words, i.e. words that
consist of one root-morpheme and one or more suffixal morphemes, e.g.,
acceptable, acceptability, blackish, etc.; 2) radical-prefixal words, i.e. words that
consist of one root-morpheme and a prefixal morpheme, e.g., outdo, rewrite; 3)
prefixo-radical-suffixal, i.e. words which consist of one root, a prefixal and a
suffixal morphemes, e.g. disagreeable, misinterpretation, etc.
Polyradical words fall into two types; 1) polyradical words which consist of
two or more roots with no affixations morphemes, e.g., bookshelf, lamp-shade,
etc.; 2) words which contain at least two roots and one or more affixational
morphemes, e.g., safety-pin, light-mindedness, wedding-pie, class-consciousness,
etc.
The derivational bases, derivational affixes and derivational patterns are the
micro units of the derivational system of the English language; the macro units of
this system are the derivational row of words and the derivational cluster. These
two units comprise words built on the same or different derivational patterns.
to father father fatherhood fatherless fatherly
V N N A D
- mother - - -
- brother - - -
Vertically we have words with the same derivational element (n + less = A);
these words are called a derivational row (set): it is a group of words built on the
same derivational pattern, the words possess the identical affixal morpheme, the
words have the same structural meaning, though each of them has a meaning of its
own (in the given example the common derivational meaning – devoid of smth
denoted by the base).
Horizontally we have words containing the same root and built on different
patterns; these are the so-called derivational clusters. A derivational cluster (DC)
is a complex unity of words possessing the same root-morpheme but built on a
number of patterns and characterized by specific organization.
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