Lexicon - Yibin U
Download
Report
Transcript Lexicon - Yibin U
Chapter Three
Lexicon
1. What is word?
A unit of expression that has universal
intuitive recognition by native speakers,
whether it is expressed in spoken or written
form. – A vague definition.
Three senses are involved in defining “word”,
none of which is satisfactory to cope with all the
situations.
1.1 Three senses of “word”
A physical unit: a cluster of
sound segments or letters
between two pauses or blanks,
eg
Phonological:
Orthographic: It is wonderful.
Three words are recognized.
However, in casual speech or
writing, it often becomes:
Phonological:
Orthographic: It’s wonderful.
Are they two words or three?
A set of forms: walk, walks, walking, walked
How many words are there?
I usually have dinner at 6 but yesterday I had it
at seven.
How many times did the word “have” occur?
A lexical item or a lexeme
A lexical item is an entry in a dictionary. A
lexeme WRITE includes all of its
grammatical forms:
write, writes, writing, wrote, written
A grammatical unit:
sentence
clause
phrase
word
morpheme
Problem: blackboard
1.2 Identification of words
Stability: stable linguistic units.
chairman, but not *manchair
Relative uninterruptibility: though we
recognize three components in the word
disappointment, we cannot pause and add
another component in between, as in
*disinterestappointment.
But we can add another word between words:
Paul, (John) and Mary ...
A minimum free form: the smallest unit that
can constitute a complete utterance by itself,
eg
—Is Jane coming tonight?
—Possibly.
Hi.
Wonderful.
1.3 Classification of words
Variable vs. Invariable Words:
Variable words: write, writes, writing, wrote,
written; cat, cats.
Invariable words: since, when, seldom, through,
etc.
Grammatical vs. Lexical Words:
Grammatical/Function words: conjunctions,
prepositions, articles, pronouns.
Lexical/Content words: nouns, verbs, adjectives,
adverbs.
Closed-class vs. Open-class Words:
Closed-class words: New members cannot
normally be added, eg pronouns, prepositions,
conjunctions, articles, auxiliaries.
Open-class words: New members can be added,
eg nouns, verbs, adjectives, and adverbs.
Word class: known as Parts of Speech in
traditional grammar.
Noun, verb, adjective, adverb, preposition,
pronoun, conjunction, interjection, article, etc.
Some new terms in word class:
Particle: infinitive to, negative not, subordinate
units in phrasal verbs “get by”, “look back”, etc.
Auxiliary: do, have
Modal verbs: can, will, may, must, etc.
Pro-forms: substitutes for other terms.
Pronoun: he, she, I, they, everyone
Pro-adjective: Your car is red. So is his.
Pro-verb: He speaks English better than he did.
Pro-adverb: He hopes to win and I hope so too.
Pro-locative: He went there.
Determiner: all the articles, demonstratives,
and quantifiers that appear before the noun
and its modifiers.
As many as three determiners may be used in
each case and there is a fixed order when there
is more than one.
Pre
all
all
Central
her
her
her
Post
many
many
many
all
what a
the
one
a few
both my father’s
Modifier Noun
good
good
good
good
good
good
good
good
ideas
ideas
ideas
ideas
ideas
ideas
idea
idea
ideas
parents
Predeterminers: all, both; half, one-third,
three-quarters …; double, twice, three
times …; such, what (exclamative)
Central determiners: the; this, these, that,
those; PossP; we, us; you; which, what
(relative), what (interrogative); a, another,
some, any, no, either, neither; each, enough,
much, more, most, less; a few, a little
Postdeterminers: every; many, several, few,
little; one, two, three …; (a) dozen
*their all trouble
*five the all boys
*all this boy
*all both girls
2. Morphology
Morphology: the study of word-formation,
or the internal structure of words, or the
rules by which words are formed from
smaller components – morphemes.
2.1 Morphemes
The smallest unit of language in terms of
relationship between expression and content,
a unit that cannot be further divided into
smaller units without destroying or
drastically altering the meaning, whether it
is lexical or grammatical.
2.2 Types of morphemes
Free vs. Bound morphemes:
Free morphemes: those that may constitute
words by themselves, eg boy, girl, table, nation.
Bound morphemes: those that cannot occur
alone, eg -s, -ed, dis-, un-.
Root: the base form of a word that cannot
be further analyzed without total loss of
identity, eg friend as in unfriendliness.
Roots may be
free: those that can stand by themselves, eg
black+board; nation+-al; or
bound: those that cannot stand by themselves,
eg -ceive in receive, perceive, conceive.
Affix: the type of formative that can be used
only when added to another morpheme.
Normally divided into
prefix (dis-, un-) and
suffix (-en, -ify).
Base: a morpheme to which an affix is
added, eg
friend
friendly
unfriendly
unfriendliness
root > base
root/base + suffix > base
prefix + base > base
base + suffix > base?
Stem: a morpheme or combination of
morphemes to which an inflectional affix
may be added, eg friend+-s; write+-ing,
possibility+-es.
Inflection: grammatical endings, eg plural,
tense, comparative, etc.
Derivation: combination of a base and an
affix to form a new word, eg friend+-ly >
friendly.
2.3 Word-formation
Morphology
Inflectional Derivational/
Morphology
Lexical
Morphology
Inflection
Nominal forms: boys, boy’s
Verb forms: wants, wanted, wanting
Adjective/adverb forms: smaller, smallest
Compounding
Two or more free roots combine to make a
new word.
Noun compounds: daybreak, playboy, haircut,
windmill
Verb compounds: brainstorm, lipread, babysit
Adjective compounds: gray-haired, insect-eating,
dutyfree
Preposition compounds: into, throughout
Endocentric & exocentric
Endocentric: one element serves as the head,
the relationship of “a kind of”; eg
self-control: a kind of control
armchair: a kind of chair
Exocentric: there is no head, so not a
relationship of “a kind of something”, eg
scarecrow: not a kind of crow
breakneck: not a kind of neck
Written forms of compounds
Solid: blackboard, teapot, bodyguard
Hyphenated: wedding-ring, wave-length
Open: coffee table, washing machine
Free variation:
businessman, business-man, business man
winebottle, wine-bottle, wine bottle
no one, no-one, noone
Derivation
Class-changing:
N>V: lengthen, hospitalize, discard
N>A: friendly, delightful, speechless
V>N: worker, employee, inhabitant
V>A: acceptable, adorable
A>N: rapidness, rapidity
A>V: deafen, sweeten
Adj>Adv: exactly, quickly
Class-preserving:
N>N: nonsmoker, ex-wife, booklet
V>V: disobey, unfasten
A>A: grayish, irrelevant
3. Lexical change
Formation of new words
Phonological change
Morphosyntactic change
Semantic change
Orthographic change
3.1 Word-formation through lexical
change
Invention/Coinage
Mostly brand names:
Kodak, Coke, nylon, Band-aid, Xerox, Lycra
Blending
transfer+resistor>transistor
smoke+fog>smog
motorist+hotel>motel
breakfast+lunch>brunch
modulator+demodulator>modem
dance+exercise>dancercise
advertisement+editorial>advertorial
education+entertainment>edutainment
information+commercial>infomercial
Back-formation
diagnose < diagnosis
enthuse < enthusiasm
laze < lazy
liaise < liaison
reminisce < reminiscence
statistic < statistics
televise < television
burgle, commentate, edit, peddle, scavenge,
sculpt, swindle
air-condition, babysit, brainstorm, brainwash,
browbeat, dry-clean, house-hunt, housekeep,
sightsee, tape-record
articulate, assassinate, coeducate, demarcate,
emote, intuit, legislate,marinate, orate, vaccinate,
valuate
Abbreviations
Clipping
Back-clippings: ad(vertisement), chimp(anzee),
deli(catessen), exam(ination), hippo(potamus),
lab(oratory), piano(forte), reg(ulation)s
Fore-clippings: (ham)burger, (omni)bus,
(violin)cello, (heli)copter, (alli)gator, (tele)phone,
(earth)quake
Fore-and-aft clippings: (in)flu(enza),
(de)tec(tive)
Acronym
AIDS, Aids: Acquired Immune Deficiency
Syndrome
ASAP: as soon as possible
CD-ROM: compact disc read-only memory
WASP: white Anglo-Saxon protestant
dink(y): double income, no kids
nilk(y): no income, lots of kids
Initialism
AI: artificial intelligence
a.s.a.p.: as soon as possible
ECU: European Currency Unit
HIV: human immunodeficiency virus
PC: personal computer
PS: postscript
RSVP: répondez s’il vous plait (‘please reply’ in
French)
Analogical creation
From irregular to regular:
work: wrought > worked
beseech: besought > beseeched
slay: slew > slayed?
go: went > goed???
Borrowing
French: administration, parliament, public,
court, crime, judge, army, enemy, officer,
peace, soldier, war, faith, religion, coat,
costume, dress, fashion, jewel, dinner, feast,
fry, roast, supper, toast, customer, money,
price, art, college, music, poet, prose, story,
study
Latin: admit, client, conviction, discuss,
equal, index, library, medicine, minor
Greek: catastrophe, cosmos, criterion,
idiosyncrasy
Spanish and Portuguese: banana, barbecue,
cafeteria, cargo, chocolate, cigar, cocaine,
cockroach, cocoa, guitar, mosquito, negro,
potato, tank, tobacco, tomato, vanilla
Italian: aria, bandit, broccoli, casino,
concerto, duet, finale, influenza, mafia,
malaria, paparazzi (singular paparazzo),
piano, pizza, solo, soprano, spaghetti, studio,
umbrella, volcano
Dutch: boss, brandy, cookie, cruise, deck,
dock, dollar, freight, gin, kit, knapsack,
landscape, luck, sketch, slim, smuggle, snap,
trek, yacht
Arabic: admiral, alchemy, alcohol, algebra,
alkali, almanac, assassin, candy, hazard,
lemon, magazine, safari, sofa, zero
Indian: bungalow, cashmere, curry, ginger,
jungle, mango, polo, pyjamas (or pajamas),
shampoo, swastika, thug, yoga
Chinese: chop suey, chow, chow mein,
ginseng, gung-ho, ketchup (or catchup or
catsup), kung fu, tea, tofu (via Japanese),
typhoon
Types of loan words
Loanwords:
au pair, encore, coup d’etat, kungfu, sputnik
Loanblend
coconut: coco (Spanish) + nut (English)
Chinatown: China (Chinese) + town (English)
Loanshift
bridge: meaning as a card game borrowed from
Italian ponte
Loan translation, or calque
free verse < L verse libre
black humor < Fr humour noir
found object < Fr objet trouvé
3.2 Phonological change
Loss of sound:
loss of the velar fricative /x/ which existed in
O.E.
loss of sound in fast speech,
eg library, laboratory
and > ’n in connected speech,
eg rock-’n-roll
Addition of sound:
L. studium > O.F. estudie, Sp. estudio, Port.
estudo
Metathesis: changing the sequence of sound
English: rascal > rapscallion
O.E. brid > bird, O.E. ox/ax > ask
Assimilation:
impossible, immovable
irregular, irresponsible
illogical, illegal
3.3 Morphosyntactic change
Morphological change:
third person singular present tense:
-(e)th: do(e)th, goeth, hath, findeth >
-(e)s: does, goes, has, finds
the campus of the university >
the university’s campus
Syntactic change:
He saw you not. > He didn’t see you.
I know not where to hide my head. > I don’t
know where to hide my head.
Fusion/blending:
equally good + just as good > equally as good
It’s no use getting there before nine + There’s
no use in getting there before nine > There’s no
use getting there before nine.
3.4 Semantic change
Broadening:
holiday: holy day (religion) > day for rest
bird: young bird > any kind
task: tax > work
Narrowing:
meat: food >
girl: young person > young woman
deer: beast > a special kind of animal
Meaning shift:
bead: prayer > the prayer bead >
small, ball-shaped piece of glass,
metal or wood
Class shift: conversion to other
word classes
engineer: person trained in
engineering > to act as an
engineer (N>V)
Folk etymology: a popular but mistaken
account of the origin of a word or phrase .
history: Old French < Latin < Greek historia,
meaning 'knowledge through inquiry, record, or
narrative'.
his story > herstory
Fake etymology: a kind of folk etymology
Manhattan: man with hat on
MBA: married but available
PhD: perhaps have divorced
golf: Gentlemen Only; Ladies Forbidden
3.5 Orthographic change
Change of spelling:
Iesus > Jesus
sate > sat
Sunne > Sun