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Prof. dr Slavica Perović Morphology COMPOUNDING Based on L. Bauer, English Word-Formation and other sources 1. Introduction Although compounding is the most productive type of word formation process in English, it is perhaps also the most controversial one in terms of its linguistic analysis. It is a field of study where intricate problems abound, numerous issues remain unresolved and convincing solutions are generally not so easy to find. In English, as in many other languages, a number of different compounding patterns are attested. Not all words from all word classes can combine freely with other words to form compounds. One possible way of establishing compound patterns is to classify compounds according to the nature of their heads. Thus there are compounds involving nominal heads, verbal heads and adjectival heads. Classifications based on syntactic category are of course somewhat problematic because many words of English belong to more than one category (e.g. walk can be a noun and a verb, blind can be an adjective, a verb and a noun, green can be an adjective, a verb and a noun, etc.) but nevertheless this type of classification will be used because it gives a clear set of form classes, whereas other possible classifications based on, for example, semantics, appear to involve an even greater degree of arbitrariness (Brekle sets up about one hundred different semantic classes, while Hatcher has only four). In the following, compounds with more than two members will be ignored, because more complex compounds can be broken down into binary sub-structures, which means that the properties of larger compounds can be predicted on the basis of their binary constituents. Hence, larger compounds follow the same structural and semantic patterns as two-member compounds. 2 Compound nouns 2.1 Analyzability (transparency) In general the meaning of a compound noun is a specialization of the meaning of its head. The modifier limits the meaning of the head: a laser printer is a kind of printer, a book cover is a kind of cover, a letter head is a head of the letter, etc. We could say that these compounds have their semantic head inside the compound, which is the reason why they are called endocentric compounds (the neo-classical element endo -‘inside’). However, in another common type of compound, the exocentric or bahuvrihi compounds, the semantic head is not explicitly expressed. A redhead, for example, is not a kind of head, but is a person with a red head. Similarly, a blockhead is also not a head, but a person with a head that is as hard and unreceptive as a block (e.g. stupid). And a lionheart is not a type of heart, but a person with a heart like a lion (in its courage, bravery, fearlessness, etc.). Apart from endocentric and exocentric compounds there is another type of compound labeled copulative compounds (or dvandva compounds in Sanskrit grammarian terms).This type is characterized by the fact that none of the two members of the compound is semantically prominent than the other, but both members equally contribute to the meaning of the compound. They could be said to have two semantic heads, none of them being subordinate to the other. A fighter-bomber is an aircraft that is both a fighter and a bomber. A poet-translator is a person who is both a poet and a translator. This type of copulative compound that refers to one entity that is characterized by both members of the compound is called appositional compound. Dvandvas that denote two entities that stand in a particular relationship with regard to the following noun are called coordinative compounds. The doctor-patient gap is thus a gap between doctor and patient, the nature-nurture debate is a debate on the relationship between nature and nurture, and so on. 2.2 Types of compound nouns 2.2.1 Noun + noun The majority of compounds in this class are endocentric. The most productive type is made up of two common nouns. e.g. bedroom, water tank, printer cartridge, tortoise-shell ,honey - bee, pine tree, safety belt, deathbed, cable television, aversion therapy, latchkey child ,battered baby syndrome, bang zone, credibility gap, language laboratory, bullet train, family planning, town-planning, brain-washing, story-telling, cigar-smoker, song-writer, stock- holder, computer designer, daybreak, frostbite, bee sting , headache, sound change etc. The next group is that where the first element of the compound is a proper noun. e.g. Hampstead Heath, Oxford Street, Park Lane, Brandon Hill, Piccadilly Circus, Westminster Bridge, Kennedy Airport, Canterbury Cathedral, David Hume Tower, Mao flu, Markov chain, Shakespearean sonnet, Moog synthesizer, Utah effect, etc. Within this category, the next group consists of compounds made up of gerund + noun. And although a gerund has both nominal and verbal characteristics, semantic relationships between the to elements seem more like those which hold in noun + noun compounds than those which hold in verb + noun compounds. e.g. looking – glass, hearing – aid, frying – pan, punching bag, diving board, dancing girl, baking powder, carving knife, walking stick, running water, parking orbit, holding pattern, queuing theory, etc. The pattern of noun + noun exocentric compounds is very restricted in productivity but there are few examples: e.g. birdbrain, egghead, blockhead, hammerhead, butterfingers, featherbrain, featherweight, hunchback, pot – belly ,hatchback ,skinhead . The second group is made up of appositional compound whose first element, in majority of cases, marks the sex of a person. e.g. girl – friend, manservant, woman doctor, etc. The pattern is still productive with pronominal sex markers used for animals. e.g. she – bear, she – dog, he – goat, etc. Dvandvas, which make up the third group, are still occasionally coined, and a recent example is panty – hose. 2.2.2 Verb + noun We can distinguish two different patterns. The first one is where the noun is the direct object of the verb and these compounds are all exocentric. e.g. cut – throat, kill – joy, pickpocket, spoil – sport ,scatterbrain, telltale, tattletale, breakfast, dreadnought, password, passport, push-bike, pushcart, ripcord, tugboat, killdeer, etc. The second pattern is where the noun is not the direct object of the verb. These compounds are all endocentric and the pattern is productive. e.g. crybaby, drift wood, drip coffee, flashlight, hangman, playboy, pin – up girl, watchdog, turntable, tugboat, stinkweed, mincemeat, glowworm, jump jet, play pit, hovercraft, crashpad, giggle – smoke, goggle – box, dangle – dolly, etc. 2.2.3 Noun +verb This pattern is not productive probably due to the fact that often there is the problem of knowing whether the second element is a noun or a verb. e.g. nosebleed, sunshine, birth control, swallow dive, bedroll, bedspread, deathwatch, daybreak, etc. 2.2.4 Verb + verb This pattern is extremely rare and probably not productive. Established examples are make – believe, hearsay. 2.2.5 Adjective + noun Sometimes it is difficult to determine whether a given adjective + noun collocation is a compound or a noun phrase and the only distinguishing criterion is the stress pattern. While phrases tend to be stressed phrase-finally, i.e. on the last word, compounds tend to be stressed on the first element. This difference is captured in so-called nuclear stress rule (‘phrasal stress is on the last word of the phrase’), and the so called compound stress rule (‘stress is on the left-hand member of the compound’). e.g. gréenhouse ‘a glass building for growing plants’ a green hóuse ‘a house that is green’ blackberry, sweetheart, madman, common-sense, blue print, fast-food, hard-stuff, bluebell, fathead, hardhat, paleface, redcap, highbrow, heavyweight, etc. 2.2.6 Particle + noun This is quite a productive pattern. e.g. overalls, by-way, downpour, afterheat, in-crowd, off-islander, etc. 2.2.7 Adverb + noun This is a very restricted pattern, partly because only adverbs of time and place occur in such compounds. This class is not so easily distinguishable from the previous since many of the particles can be interpreted as adverbs showing time or place. e.g. aftertaste, afterglow, afterthought, off-shoot, off-spring, income, outcome, outpost, outbreak, outlaw, overcoat, overdose, overtime, undercurrent, under-secretary, new generation, etc. 2.2.8 Verb + particle It is argued that words of this form are not compounds at all but the result of the conversion of a phrasal verb into a noun (accompanied by a stress shift). e.g .backup, blowup, linkup, markup , smashup, pileup, call-up, catch-up ,flare-up, foulup, jam-up, mix-up sign-up, tie-up, toss-up, wrap-up, breakdown, closedown, countdown, lowdown, meltdown, rubdown, rundown, showdown, shutdown, turndown, put-down, sit- down, step-down, write-down, break-in, buy-in, cave-in, drive-in, fill-in, lead-in, listen-in, blowout, burnout, dropout, knockout, printout, tryout, falling-out, shoot-out, add-on, carrying-on, follow-on, slip-on, carryon, cutoff, liftoff, payoff, brush-off, rip-off, spin-off ,carryover, pushover ,rollover, strikeover, going-over, feedback, kickback, throwback, getaway, hideaway, stowaway, knockabout, runabout, turnaround, standby, go-between, follow-through, etc. 2.2.9 Phrase compounds Sometimes an entire phrase seems to be involved in the formation of a new word and it may be questionable whether such formations should be considered to be compounds or lexicalizations of syntactic structures. Within this group we distinguish between endocentric, exocentric and dvandva compounds. Endocentric phrase compounds include small and non- productive class with an initial head element (e.g. son-in- law, editor-in-chief, lady-in-waiting, writer-inresidence, man-of-war, dog-in-the-manger, etc.), and more common and much more productive class where the head element is final and the first element is a phrase or sentence: e.g. upper-class manner, under-the-weather feeling, penny-in-the-slot machine, a fly-bynight scheme, a never-to-be-forgotten film, a life-and-death struggle, a hit-and-run driver, a hard-to-please employer, a pain-in-the-stomach gesture, a don’t-tell-mewhat-to-do look, an oh-what-a-wicked-world-this-is-and-how-I-wish-I-could-makeit-better-and- nobler expression ,etc. Exocentric phrase compounds: love-in-a-mist, love-lies-bleeding, forget-me-not, a has-been, a don’t-know, an also-run, etc. Dvandvas differ from true dvandva compounds in including the word and: e.g. bubble - and- squeak, milk-and-water, whisky-and-soda, pepper-and-salt, etc. 2.3. Interpreting compound nouns As should be evident from all the examples discussed so far, these compounds show a wide range of meanings, and there have been many attempts at classifying these meanings (e.g. Hatcher 1960, Brekle 1970, Levi 1978, etc.). Given the proliferation and arbitrariness of possible semantic categories (e.g. location, cause, manner, possessor, material, content, source, etc.) such semantically based taxonomies appear somewhat futile. What is more promising is to ask what kinds of interpretation are in principle possible, given a certain compound. In isolation, i.e. without preceding or following discourse, the compound is interpreted chiefly by relating the two members of a compound to each other in terms of the typical relationship between the entities referred to by the two nouns. What is construed as ‘the typical relationship’ depends partly on the semantics of the noun. It can be said that if the right-hand member of a compound is a relational noun, the left-hand member will normally be interpreted as the argument of the relational noun. For example, the left-hand member of a compound with the relational noun surgery as head will be interpreted as an argument of surgery, i.e. as the entity which is necessarily affected by the action of surgery. Thus brain surgery is interpreted as surgery performed on the brain, finger surgery is interpreted as surgery performed on fingers. 3 Compound adjectives 3.1 Types of compound adjectives 3.1.1 Noun +adjective This is the most frequent type of compound adjectives. e.g. capital-intensive, crashworthy, flightworthy, host-specific, lead-free, head-strong, airtight, colour blind, carefree, seasick, threadbare, sky-blue, stone-cold, paper-thin, jetblack, steel-grey, bone-dry, sun-bright, fire-proof, water-proof, dog-tired, spell-bound, shell-shocked, card-carrying, clotheared, space-borne, brimful, knee-deep, hip-deep, waist-high, lifelong, worldwide, etc. 3.1.2 Verb + adjective This type is rare and possibly new. e.g fail safe 3.1.3 Adjective + adjective Adjective + adjective compounds are normally endocentric. These compounds can be categorized formally according to whether or not they contain participles. e.g double-helical, blue-green, red-hot, large-statured, open-ended, ready-made, Britishmade, high-born, dead-tired, dead-beaten, wooden-headed, absent-minded, cleanshaven, hard-working, good-looking, etc. 3.1.4 Adverb + adjective This type is not particularly common and seems to be more frequent with participial head element. e.g best-equipped, long-awaited, above-mentioned, well-preserved, thoroughly-tested, etc. Cross-modal, roughly-equivalent, sickly-sweet are some of the examples without a participle. A more common type has a particle as the first element: over-qualified, uptight, over-right, over-ripe, etc. 3.1.5 Noun + noun In many cases these adjectives are converted nouns or verbs, and it often seems rather misleading to term them adjectives at all: a noun compound functioning as a modifier to another noun is probably not so much functioning as an adjective as forming a three-term noun compound. The agreement against this position is that such modifying compounds become institutionalized and lexicalized as units independent of their constituent parts, and in some cases are only used attributively while in other cases they have very different connotations from the same forms used as non-attributive compound nouns. e.g back-street (abortionist) coffee-table (book) glassteel (sky-scraper) year-end (exam) world-class (polo player) wood-block (floor) thumbnail (sketch) drum-head (court) 3.1.6 Verb + noun e.g break-bulk (consignment) roll-neck (sweater) turn-key (contract) push-button (door) break neck (motorcycle) key-note (speech) 3.1.7 Adjective + noun Most of these compounds are not compounds unless they are used attributively, but noun phrases. They change their stress pattern when they are used attributively and often become hyphenated. e.g broad-brush (estimate) grey-collar (worker) red-brick (university) broadloom (carpet) broad-spectrum (antibiotic) dead-end (job) fair-weather (friend) free-hand (drawing) free-range (eggs) free-will (consent) high-hat (behaviour) red-carpet (treatment) real-life (experience) rare-book (store) low-budget (films) 3.1.8 Particle + Noun In these examples a preposition phrase is converted into a modifier. e.g before-tax (profits) in depth (study) after-hours (drinking) beforehand (contract) in-flight (meals) under cover (agent) under-ground (films) undersea (oil deposits) up-market (factory) up-tempo (melody) on-line (equipment) off-hand (excuses) off-colour (story) on-the-scene (witness) off-the-record (remarks) 3.1.9 Noun+verb This type doesn’t exist, since the verb always turns up as a present or past participle, and therefore becomes classified as an adjective. 3.1.10 Verb + verb This type is new and possibly growing. e.g go-go (dancer) pass-fail (test) stop-go (economies) 3.1.11 Adjective/adverb + verb Their first element is an adjective in form but appears to function semantically as an adverb. e.g high-rise (tower) quick-change (artiste) broad-cast (pencils) dead-beat (compass) high-count (sheeting) 3.1.12 Verb + particle This type is very productive. e.g see-through (blouse) tow-away (zone) wrap-around (skirt) stick-on (label) stand-by (equipment) walk-on (part) break-away (party) stand-off (missile) stand-up (collar) walk-up (building) 3.2 Solid compound adjectives There are some well-established permanent compound adjectives that have become solid over a longer period, especially in American usage: earsplitting, eyecatching, downtown. However, in British usage, these, apart from downtown, are more likely written with a hyphen: ear-splitting, eye-catching. Other solid compound adjective are for example: Numbers that are spelled out and have the suffix –fold added: fifteenfold, sixfold. Points of the compass: northwest, northwester, northwesterly, northwestwards, but not North- West Frontier. 3.3 Hyphenated compound adjectives A compound adjective is hyphenated if the hyphen helps the reader differentiate a compound adjective from two adjacent adjective that each independently modify the noun. Compare the following examples: acetic acid solution ‘a bitter solution producing vinegar or acetic acid’ acetic-acid solution ‘ a solution of acetic acid’ The hyphen is unneeded when capitalization or italicization makes grouping clear: old English scholar ‘an old person who is English and a scholar, or an old scholar who studies English’ Old English scholar ‘a scholar of Old English’ De facto proceedings If, however, there is no risk of ambiguities, it may be written without a hyphen: Sunday morning walk. Hyphenated compound adjectives may have been formed originally by an adjective preceding a noun: Round table → round-table discussion Blue sky→ blue-sky law Red light→ red-light district Others may have originated with a verb preceding an adjective or adverb: Feel good→ feel-good factor Buy now, pay later→ buy-now pay-later purchase Yet others are created with an original verb preceding a preposition: Stick on→ stick-on label Walk on→ walk-on part Stand by→ stand-by fare Roll on, roll off→ roll-on roll-off ferry The following compound adjectives are always hyphenated when they are not written as one word: An adjective preceding a noun to which –d or -ed has been added as a pastparticiple construction : e.g. loud-mouthed hooligan middle-aged lady rose-tinted glasses A noun, adjective, or adverb preceding a present participle: e.g. an awe-inspiring personality a long-lasting affair a far-reaching decision Numbers spelled out or as numerics: e.g. seven-year itch five-sided polygon 20th-century poem 30-piece band tenth - story window A numeric with the affix –fold has a hyphen ( 15-fold), but when spelled out takes a solid construction (fifteenfold). Numbers, spelled out or numeric, with added –odd : sixteen-odd, 70-odd. Compound adjectives with high- or low- : high-level discussion, low-price markup. Colours in compounds : a dark-blue sweater, a reddish-orange dress Fractions as modifiers are hyphenated : five-eights inches, but if numerator or denominator are already hyphenated, the fraction itself does not take a hyphen : a thirty-three thousandth part. Fractions used as nouns have no hyphens : I ate only one third of the pie. Comparatives and superlatives in compound adjectives also take hyphens : the highest-placed competitor, a shorter-term loan. Compounds including two geographical modifiers : Afro-Cuban, Anglo-Asian, but not Central American. The following compound adjectives are not normally hyphenated : Where there is no risk of ambiguity : a Sunday morning walk Left-hand components of a compound adjective that end in –ly that modify right-hand components that are past participles ending in –ed : e.g. a hotly disputed subject a greatly improved scheme a distantly related celebrity Compound adjectives that include comparatives and superlatives with more, most, less or least : e.g. a more recent development the most respected member a less opportune moment the least expected event Ordinarily hyphenated compounds with intensive adverbs in front of adjectives : e.g. very much admired classicist really well accepted proposal 4. Compound verbs 4.1 Types of compound verbs Compound verbs in English are rather rare and majority of them are formed by backformation or conversion from compound nouns. 4.1.1 Noun + verb The vast majority of this group arise from back-formation. e.g. blockbust, carbon-date, colour-code, head-hunt, sky-dive, carbon-copy, backbite, boot-leg, bottle-wash, button-mend, caretake, boot-lick, fortune-hunt, lip-read, gatecrash, globe-trot, hand-shake, house-hunt, book-keep, sight-see, sunbathe, jerrybuild, etc. 4.1.2 Verb + noun Bauer lists only one example of this type, and it is converted from a compound noun. The verb is to shunpike. In the Longman Dictionary of the English Language I found another example of this type of compound verb- to humbug. 4.1.3 Verb + verb This type is exceedingly rare. Bauer lists only one recent example, trickle-irrigate, pointing out that even that could be either noun + verb or a back-formation from trickleirrigation. 4.1.4 Adjective + verb This pattern is relatively productive and generally arises through back-formation or, occasionally, conversion. e.g. double-book, fine-tune, free-associate, soft-land, whitewash, blacklist, foulmouth, roughcast, rough-dry, rough-hew, hard-boil, deep-fry, shortcut, blindfold, broadcast, etc. 4.1.5 Particle + verb Although some of this type may be back-formations, most of them seem to be genuine verbal formations. e.g. overachieve, overbook, overeducate, overmark, overcome, overestimate, outachieve, outdo, outwit, outstrip, outsell, outsay, undermine, underbuy, undersell, undertake, undergo, undercut, uphold, uplift, uproot, offset, etc. 4.1.6 Adjective + noun Compound verbs on this pattern are not common. e.g. brown-bag, bad-mouth, high-pressure, high-tail, etc. 4.1.7 Noun + noun This type is not particularly common and generally arises from conversion of a compound noun. e.g. breath-test, data-bank, network, dovetail, wallpaper, warehouse, war-game, snowball, snowplough, shoe-horn, sandbag, pigeonhole, mastermind, jackknife, keyboard, etc. 4.2 Hyphenation Compound verbs with single-syllable modifiers are solid, or unhyphenated. Those with longer modifiers may originally be hyphenated, but as they became established, they became solid. e.g. overhang, counterattack. There was a tendency in the 18th century to use hyphens excessively, that is, to hyphenate all previously established solid compound verbs. American English, however, has diminished the use of hyphens, while British English is more conservative. 5. Other form classes Apart from the main parts of speech which can be compound we can also observe some less important parts of speech in the role of compounds. a) Compound pronouns : myself, whichever, whoever, somebody, anybody, something, nothing, anything, etc. b) compound adverbs: anywhere, somewhere, whenever, wherever, elsewhere, anyway, etc. The most common way of forming compound adverbs is by the suffixation of –ly to a compound adjective, but other patterns are also found: e.g. double-quick,flat-out, flat-stick, off-hand, over- night, etc. 6. Rhyme-motivated compounds The majority of this class are noun compounds made up of two nouns, but other types also exist. In these compounds, the rhyme between the two elements is the major motivating factor in the formation. e.g. higgledy-piggledy, hobnob, hokey-pokey, hoity-toity, roly-poly, teeny-weeny, braindrain, culture-vulture, flower-power, gang-bang, nitty-gritty, stun-gun, humdrum, hoi polloi, tee-hee, rag-tag, etc. 7. Ablaut –motivated compounds These compounds involve ablaut, i.e. vowel change or alternation between the two elements. The most common patterns are / i / ~ /ae/ and / i /~/ o / . e.g. flip-flop, riff-raff, shilly-shally, tick-tock, wishy-washy, zig-zag, etc. 8. Neo-classical compounds Neoclassical compounds, are formations in which elements of Latin or Greek origin are combined to form new combinations that are not attested in the original languages (hence the term NEOclassical). (1) a. biochemistry b. photograph c. geology biorhythm photoionize biology biowarfare photoanalysis neurology biography photovoltaic philology It is not obvious whether the italicized elements should be regarded as affixes or as bound roots. If the data in (1a) are taken as evidence for the prefix status of bio-, and the data in (1c) for the suffix status of –logy, we are faced with the problem that words such as biology would consist of a prefix and a suffix. This would go against basic assumptions about the general structure of words. Alternatively, we could assume that we are not dealing with affixes, but with bound roots, so that we are in fact talking about cases of compounding and not of affixation. Speakers of English that are familiar with such words or even know some Greek would readily say that bio- has the meaning ‘life’, and this insight would lead to the conclusion that the words in (1a) behave exactly like compounds on the basis of native words. For example, a kitchen sink is a kind of sink, just as biochemistry is a kind of chemistry. The only difference between the neo-classical forms and native compounds is that the non-native elements are obligatory bound. This is also the reason why the neoclassical elements are often called combining forms. Now we shall focus on two phenomena that deserve special attention. First, the position and combinatorial properties of neoclassical elements, and second, the status and behavior of final –o- that often appears in such forms. (2) a. form meaning example astro- ‘space’ astro-physics, astrology bio- ‘life’ biodegradable, biocracy biblio- ‘book’ bibliography, bibliotherapy elctro- ‘electricity’ electro-cardiograph, electrography geo- ‘earth’ geographic, geology hrydro- ‘water’ hiydro-electric, hydrology morpho- ‘figure morphology, morpho-genesis philo- ‘love’ philotheist, philo-gastric retro- ‘backwards’ retroflex, retro-design tele- ‘distant’ television, telepathy theo- ‘god’ theocratic, theology b. -cide ‘murder’ suicide, genocide -cracy ‘rule’ bureaucracy, democracy -graphy ‘write’ sonography, bibliography -itis ‘disease’ laryngitis, lazyitis -logy ‘science of’ astrology, neurololgy -morph ‘figure’ antropomorph, polymorph -phile ‘love’ anglophile, bibliophile -phobe ‘fear’ Anglophobe, bibliophobe -scope ‘look at’ laryngoscope, telescope As indicated by hyphens, none of these forms can occur as a free form. With the exception of morph-/-morph and phil-/-phile, which can occur both in initial or in final position, the elements in (2a) and (2b) occur either initially or finally. Hence a distinction is often made between initial combining forms (ICFs) and final combining forms (FCFs). The difference between affixes and combining forms is that neither affixes nor bound roots can combine with each other to form a new word :an affix can combine with a bound root (e.g. bapt-ism, prob-able), but not whit another affix to form a new word (re-ism, ism-able). And a root can take an affix but cannot combine with another bound root (bapt-prob). Combining forms, however, can either combine with bound roots (e.g. glaciology, scientology), with words (e.g. lazyitis, morpho-syntax), or with another combining form (e.g. hydrology, morphology) to make up a new word. In the vast majority of cases we find the linking element –o- in all of the above compounds, but there are some exceptions listed in (3) : (3) examples lacking –o- examples with –o- a. tele- television - b. –cide suicide genocide -itis laryngitis - -morph polymorph anhtropomorph -scope telescope laryngoscope bureaucracy democracy combining form c. -cracy Tele- is the only ICF that never allows the linking element, while there are four final combining forms allowing vowels other than -o- preceding them. In (3c) we have bureaucracy which may seem like an exception, but only in orthography. Phonologically, the form has the same linking element as we find it in dem[]כּcracy. This suggests that the phenomenon is not orthographic, but phonological in nature, since orthography obviously tolerates the use of other letters as long as they represent a required sound. Probing further in the phonological direction, we can make some generalizations on the basis of the forms in (3) : if there is already a vowel in the final position of the ICF or in the initial position of the FCF, -o- does not show up. Thus, tele-scope has no -o- , but laryng-o-scope has it ; poly-morph has no -o-, but anthrop-omorph has it; sui-cide has no -o-, but gen-o-cide has it, and –itis does not take -o- as a linking element either, because it starts in a vowel. If this account of the facts is correct , there should be ICFs ending in a consonant that do not take -o- when combined with the vowel-initial FCFs, but that do take -owhen combined with consonant-initial FCFs. And indeed, such data exist : the ICF gastr- alternates with the form gastro -, and the alternation depends on the following sound (e.g. gastr-it is, gastr-o- graphy).Hence, we can conclude that the occurrence of o- is, at least with some formations, phonologically determined. However, such an account doest not work for all combining forms (4) a. b. biology bio- acoustic biophysical bio- energy biotechnology bio- implanted geocentric geoarchaeological geology geoeletric geography geoenvironmental The data in (4) show that bio- and geo- do not have alternant forms (bi-/bio-, ge-/geo-), which means that with these ICFs, -o- does not have status of a n thematic vowel, but is part of the phonological representation of the ICF. From this we can conclude that the status of-o- is not the same in all neoclassical formations, but should be decided on for each combining form separately on the basis of distributional evidence.