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Chapter Three Lexicon 词汇学 What is word? The formation of words Lexical change 通过本章的学习使学生对词汇、形态学和 语言的变化有所认识,了解词的定义、形 成以及词汇变化。 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: they may have inflective changes. The same word may have different grammatical forms but part of the word remains relatively constant. write, writes, writing, wrote, written; cat, cats. Invariable words: words which do not inflective endings. 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; 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. purify ← pur(e) + -ify Verb ← adj. + -ify a morphological rule amplify, simplify, electrify, falsify 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. boys, chairman, checking, disappointment, disestablishmentarianism 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-. All monomorphemic words are free morphemes. Polymorphemic words which consist wholly of free morphemes are compounds: paymaster, moonwalk, babysit, godfather, sunflower. 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; remit, submit, permit, commit retain, contain, maintain incur, recur, occur . A few English roots may have both free and bound variants: sleep, slept, child, children 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). infix (feet, goose, geese, abso-bloomingly-lutely) Base: a morpheme to which an affix is added, eg A base is any form to which affixes of any kind can be added; a form to which a rule of word-formation is applied. Any root or stem can be a base, desirable is a base in undesirable, internation is a base in international. friend root > base friendly root/base + suffix > base unfriendly prefix + base > base unfriendliness 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. Inflectional affix (Inflectional morphemes) Derivational affix (Derivational morphemes) Often only add a minute or delicate grammatical meaning to the stem, Serve to produce different forms of a single word Toys, walks, John’s Often change the lexical meaning Cite citation; Gernerate generation Do not change the word class flower/flowers change class not change class small/smallnes brother/brotherhood s Are conditioned by nonsemantic factors outside the word they attach to but within the phrase of sentence. The boy likes to navigate on the internet. Are often based on simple meaning distinctions. Clever: 1.the property: clever 2.the state of being clever: cleverness Mostly suffixes, always word final Drums, walks, Mary’s Be prefixes disable, depart, online suffixes slaver, teacher, workable 2.3 Word-formation Morphology Inflectional Derivational/ Morphology Lexical Morphology Inflections (Inflectional morphology) The manifestation of grammatical relationships through the addition of inflection affixes, such as number, person, finiteness, aspect and case, which do not change the grammatical class of the stems to which they are attached. Number: table/tables, apple/applescar/cars Person, finiteness and aspect: talk/talks/talking/talked, open/opens/opening/opened, Inflection Nominal forms: boys, boy’s Verb forms: wants, wanted, wanting Adjective/adverb forms: smaller, smallest Each set constitutes a single paradigm, a set of grammatically conditioned forms all derived from a single root or stem. Word formation (Lexical / Dervational morphonogy) The process of word variations signaling lexical relationships. purify → pur (e) + -ify Two types: Compound and Derivation Compound (Compositional type) : Words that consist of more than one lexical morpheme, or the way to join two separate words to produce a single form. Relations between lexical 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 (Derivational type) Relations between roots and affixes un + conscious → unconscious, nation + al →national, national + ize →nationalize, nationalize + ation →nationalization 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 2.4 Sememe vs. Morpheme, and Phoneme vs. Morpheme Sememe vs. Morpheme Sememe is the smallest component of meaning. The morpheme –s has only one sememe: PLURALITY, meaning more than one. Five occasions of the relationship One morpheme vs. one sememe -less: WITHOUT. fearless, careless, countless, faceless One morpheme vs. more than one sememe a-: 1. arise, await, enhance the meaning of the original senses rise and wait; 2. awash, ablush, changes both the semantic and the grammatical catories of wash and blush, verb → adj; 3. atypical, asymmertry, no, non One sememe vs. more than one morpheme no, non: atypical, erostrate, illegal, neither, untidy Morphemes that have no specific sememe en- has no specific sememe, but may help change grammatical and semantic categories. joy (adj, quality) enjoy (verb, event) cran-: cranberry --- blueberry, blackberry, cloudberry Function changes in both sememe and morpheme without morpheme change run: run a company (verb, event) in a short run (noun, thing) No morpheme change, but the sememe is changed: progress, fish, fat (verb, event / noun, thing / adj, quality) Morpheme vs. phoneme Morphophonology (Morphonology, Morphonemics, Morphophonemics): a branch of linguistics that refers to the analysis and classification of the phonological factors that affect the morpheme forms and, correspondingly, the morphological factors that affect the phoneme forms. It studies the interrelationship between phonology and morphology. A single phoneme vs. a single morpheme A single phoneme may represent a single morpheme, but they are not identical. A single morpheme vs. multiple phoneme Morphemes may also be represented by phonological structures other than a single phoneme. Thus, the syllabic / phonological structure of a word and its morphemic / grammatical structure do not necessarily correspond. tell + er /te + lә / big (g) + er /bi + gә / Allomorph Some Morphemes have a single form in all contexts: dog, bark, cat… A morpheme may have alternate shapes or phonetic forms: map dog watch mouxe ox tooth sheep maps dogs watches mice oxen teeth sheep / mæps / / d£gz / / w£t∫iz / / mais / /'£ksn / / ti:θ / / ∫i:p / voiceless /s/ voiced /z/ vowel-consonant structure /iz/ diphthong /ai/ nasal sound /n/ long vowel /i:/ zero form /Ø/ The plural morpheme can be expressed in the form of { -s ~ -z ~ -iz ~ -ai ~ - i: ~ -n ~ - Ø }. Morpheme, like phoneme, is an abstract unit, but on a higher level of abstraction. It consists of a sequence of classes of phonemes and has either lexical or grammatical meaning. Some morphemic forms represent different morphemes and thus have different sememes. The morphemic shape –s can express plurality: tables, apples, cars person / finiteness: talks, opens, shouts case: boy’s, John’s, university’s Morphemic conditions Morpheme shapes vary according to both phonological conditions and to the conditions of their own. ▲ Phonologically conditioned The form or shape of morphemes may be conditioned by phonological factors. /n/ (alveolar nasal) changes to /m/ (bilabial nasal) to make it more similar to /p/(bilabial stop). The assimilation of /n/ is to be conditioned by /p/. grammar glamor peregrinus pilgrim marbre marble The phoneme /r/ dissimilates to /l/. Dissimilation refers to the influence exercised by one sound segment upon the articulation of another, so that the sounds become less alike, or different. ▲ Morphologically conditioned Morphemes can also be conditioned by morphological factors. Three requirements should be met. a. All the allomorphs should have common meaning. E.g. the plural morpheme { -s ~ -z ~ -iz ~ -ai ~ - i: ~ -n ~ - Ø }. b. All the allomorphs should be in complementary distribution. c. Allomorphs that share the common meaning should occur in parallel formation. 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