1 / 16

Words and Word-formation Processes

Words and Word-formation Processes. Chapter 5 Ms. Abrar Mujaddidi. Introduction. We quickly understand new words in our language and accept the use of new forms of that new word. There is a lot of regularities in the word-formation processes in our language.

armani
Download Presentation

Words and Word-formation Processes

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Words and Word-formation Processes Chapter 5 Ms. Abrar Mujaddidi

  2. Introduction • We quickly understand new words in our language and accept the use of new forms of that new word. • There is a lot of regularities in the word-formation processes in our language. • In this chapter, we explore some of the processes of creating new words in a language.

  3. Etymology • The study of the origin and history of a word is known as etymology. • We should view the constant evolution of the words as a reassuring sign of vitality of the langusge.

  4. Coinage • Coinage is the invention of totally new terms. • Sources of coined words: 1. Trade names of commercial products that become general terms. e.g. aspirin, kleenex, teflon, xerox. 2. New words based on the name of a person or a place. e.g. hoover, jeans, sandwich.

  5. Borrowing • Borrowing is taking over words from other languages. • English borrows from other languages. e.g. sofa, lilac, croissant • Many languages borrow from English e.g. Japanese. supaamaaketto

  6. cont., • Loan translation: Direct translation of the elements of a word into the borrowing language. • Many languages translated the term ‘skyscraper’ into its own vocabulary. • Compare between borrowing and loan-translation?

  7. Compounding • Compounding is the joining of two separate words to produce a single form. • Compounding is very common in English and German. • E.g. Compound nouns: Bookcase, doorknob, sunburn Compound adjectives: low-paid, good-looking

  8. Blending • The combination of to separate forms to produce a single form is blending. • BUT Blending is accomplished by taking the beginning of one word and joining it to the end of the other word. • E.g. Smog (smoke + fog) brunch (breakfast + lunch) Spanglish (spanish + English)

  9. Clipping • Clipping occurs when a word with more than one syllable is is reduced to a shorter form. • E.g. gas (gasoline) fan (fanatic) ad ( advertisement)

  10. cont., • A special type of reduction is hypocorisms: a longer word is reduced to a single syllable, then a –y or –ie • E.g. movie (moving picture) hankie (handkerchief)

  11. Backformation • In backformation, a word of one type (usually a noun) is reduced to form a word of another type (usually a verb). • E.g. Televise (television) donate (donation) babysit (babysitter)

  12. Conversion • Conversion is a change in the function of the word without any reduction. • 1. Noun to a verb butter to butter 2. verb to a noun to spy a spy 3. verb to adjective see through a see-through material

  13. Acronyms • Acronyms are new words formed from the initial letters of a set of other words. • e.g. CD (compact disk) VCR (video cassette recorder) laser MADD ATM

  14. Derivation • Derivation is accomplished by the use of affixes. Affixes prefixesinfixes suffixes added to the not used added to the beginning of in standard end of the word a word English -ful or -less un- or dis-

  15. Multiple Processes • It is possible to trace the operation of more than one process in the creation of a particular word. e.g. Deli snowball

  16. See you next class read chapter 7 please!!

More Related