WORD-FORMATION
Concise Oxford Companion to the English Language
|
1998
|
|
© Concise Oxford Companion to the English Language 1998, originally published by Oxford University Press 1998. (Hide copyright information)
Copyright
WORD-FORMATION The formation of longer, more complex words from shorter, simpler WORDS. In the West, the analysis of word form began in classical Greece and passed in due course to Rome. Philosophers including Plato and Aristotle and grammarians such as Dionysius Thrax and Terentius Varro developed the study of the ways in which words were formed as a part of GRAMMAR, founding a long and subtle tradition that was inherited and extended by 19c comparative philology and 20c linguistics. The classical study was based only on GREEK and
LATIN words, and contrasted
simple word and
complex word. The simple word was discussed either in terms of its
ROOT (a basic element without adaptations or inflections), such as Greek
log, whose core meaning was ‘speech’, or as a
root word, consisting of a root, stem, and inflection (in most cases cited in standard forms, such as the nominative singular for nouns), such as Greek
lógos (speech, word) and Latin
verbum (word, verb). The complex word was discussed in terms of two processes or categories: (1) Derivation, in which
AFFIXES and inflections could be added to a root, as with
logikós, an adjective formed from
lógos, and
verbalis, and adjective formed from
verbum. (2) Composition, in which two or more roots could be combined, with appropriate affixes and inflections added, as with the nouns
biología and
biologistḗs formed from
bíos (life) and
lógos, and
agricultura, formed from
ager (field) and
cultura (cultivation).
Contemporary terms
The classical description was somewhat modified when transferred to English. The concept
root has continued in use, but in the 20c has been increasingly replaced by
BASE when discussing non-historical processes.
A root word is usually called either a
simple word or a
simplex. The classical ‘complex’ forms divide into
COMPLEX WORDS and
COMPOUND WORDS, the formation of complex words being
DERIVATION and of compound words being formerly called
composition but now usually
compounding. Derivation is the process by which the word
unfriendly is built up from the simple word or free base
friend, and
illegality is built up from the bound base
-leg-(from Latin, meaning ‘law’). Compounding is the process by which the vernacular compound
teapot is formed from the simple words
tea and
pot and the classical compound
biography is formed from the combining forms
bio- and
-graphy. Although derivation and compounding account for a large number of the composite word forms of English and other languages, they do not cover everything. As a result, at various times further descriptive categories have been added, such as
conversion or
functional shift,
back-formation,
phrasal verb,
blend,
abbreviation, and
root-creation. Sometimes, specific word-formational terms have lagged behind an awareness of the distinct forms actually occurring in a language: although, in English, verb forms like
put up and
put up with have been discussed since at least the 18c, the name
phrasal verb, by which they are now most commonly known, was not applied to them until the early 20c.
In more detail, these categories are: (1)
CONVERSION or
functional shift, the process by which words extend their grammatical function: for example, from verb to noun (
run in
go for a run), and from noun to verb (
position in
positioning people). (2)
BACK-FORMATION, the creation of a simpler or shorter form from a pre-existing more complex form:
edit from
editor,
intuit from
intuition. (3)
PHRASAL VERB, a class of verb followed by an adverbial and/or prepositional particle:
put up provide a bed for,
put up with tolerate. (4)
BLEND, the outcome of a process which collapses two words into one:
breakfast and
lunch into
brunch;
electro- and
execute into
electrocute. (5)
ABBREVIATION, the shortening of words and phrases, in three basic forms: the
INITIALISM, a set of letters pronounced as such and standing for an idea, group, or institution (
BBC, pronounced ‘bee-bee-cee’, for
British Broadcasting Corporation); the
ACRONYM, a set of letters pronounced as a word (
NATO, pronounced ‘Nay-toe’, for
North Atlantic Treaty Organization); the
CLIPPING, a short form created by removing one or more syllables (
pro for
professional,
phone for
telephone,
flu for
influenza). Blends are often closely involved with the processes of abbreviation. (6)
ROOT-CREATION, the formation of new roots or bases, which tend to be
echoic, where a form resembles one or more pre-existing forms (
cuckoo,
splish: sounds of nature), or
onomastic, deriving from names (
atlas from the name of the mythical titan;
gin from the city of Genoa). See
ECHOISM.
Word-formation clusters
In accordance with need, social context, and formational patterns, clusters of derivatives, compounds, and other usages develop around words and bases. The noun
wolf, for example, is the focus of a wide range of expressions: (1) Compounds like
prairie wolf and
timber wolf kinds of wolf,
wolf dog the off-spring of a wolf and a dog,
wolfhound a dog that hunts wolves,
wolf-fish a fish in some way like a wolf,
wolf spider a spider that hunts its prey like a wolf,
wolfsbane a poisonous plant,
wolf child a child brought up by wolves,
wolfman a man who can turn into a wolf,
wolf pack a pack of wolves,
wolf note a discordant note in music,
wolf whistle a whistle of sexual admiration,
she-wolf a female wolf,
werewolf (from German) someone who can become a wolf. (2) Derivatives like
wolfer/wolver a hunter of wolves,
wolf-like and
wolfish like a wolf,
wolfishly its adverb,
wolfishness the quality of being wolfish,
wolf down to swallow food like a wolf,
wolverine a large weasel-like animal with wolf-like attributes. (3) Fixed phrases like
Tasmanian wolf a wolf-like animal in Tasmania,
lone wolf a person who does things alone. (4) Idioms and sayings such as
cry wolf,
keep the wolf from the door,
be a wolf in sheep's clothing,
throw someone to the wolves.
Although the
wolf-cluster exhibits the range of word-forming potential, it is an ancient and diffuse system whose members cover many contexts. As such, it does not illustrate the vigour of present-day word-formation, which can be seen in a recent more or less ‘nonce’ cluster based on the name
Tourette. In 1885, the French neurologist Georges Gilles de la Tourette described a nervous condition marked by tics, jerks, grimaces, curses, mannerisms, imitative actions, and antic kinds of humour. This became known as
Gilles de la Tourette Syndrome, then as
Tourette's syndrome, often further shortened to
Tourette's. When describing people with Tourette's, the American neurologist Oliver Sacks has used the following derivations, compounds, and other forms: (1) Nouns:
Tourettism the syndrome and its effects,
motor Tourettism the physical aspect of the syndrome,
mental Tourette's the psychological aspect,
Tourette a symptom of the syndrome,
Touretter someone with the syndrome,
Tourette's Syndrome Association a proper name,
TSA its initialism,
Tourettoma a figurative mind-tumour,
super-Tourette's a powerfully destructive variety,
super-Touretter one who has it,
Tourette psychosis ‘an identity frenzy’,
Tourettesville the nickname of the town of LaCrete in Alberta, Canada, many of whose Mennonite inhabitants have the syndrome,
Grandma Tourette the nickname of a matriarch of the town. (2) Adjectives, adverbs:
Tourettic (formal) pertaining to the syndrome,
Tourettically its adverb,
Tourette-like like the syndrome,
Touretty (informal) showing symptoms,
Tourettish (informal) relating to the syndrome,
Tourettishly its adverb. (3) Verb forms:
Touretting displaying the syndrome,
Tourettized afflicted with the syndrome. (From Oliver Sacks,
The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat, 1985, and ‘Being Moved by the Spirit’,
Sunday Times, 25 Sept. 1988.)
Paradigms and paraphrases
Although they often belong in clusters, complex words are usually formed one at a time in accordance with more or less established patterns. Such patterns or
paradigms are built up analogically and differ for compounds and derivatives. Compound patterns involve a distinctive kind of stress on (the main syllable of) the first element, as in
TEApot and
eMERgency plan, and paraphrase formulas gloss the relationships between the bases in a compound: a
flower pot is a ‘pot for flowers’ and so a
slop bucket is interpretable as a ‘bucket for slops’; a
goatskin is ‘the skin of a goat’ and so an
iguana skin is interpretable as ‘the skin of an iguana’. Derivational paradigms are often cumulative, as in the set
form/formal/formality, the paraphrases expressing relationships between base and other elements:
formality is the condition of being
formal, and
formal is the adjective that relates to
form, and similar relations exist for the set
norm/normal/normality, but not for
nature,
natural, *
naturality.
The word-forming continuum
Although much of English word-formation is regular, few patterns are neat and tidy and many forms blend their categories and mix their patterns. It is useful therefore to introduce the concept
HYBRID: for example, compounds with derivational elements (
school-boyish and
mud-walled) and abbreviations involved in attribution and compounding (
a NATO radar system), in derivation (
ex-IBMer, someone who no longer works for International Business Machines), or in both (
an ex-CFL player, someone who no longer plays for the Canadian Football League). It is likely that word-formation can be most usefully discussed in terms of both a continuum in which categories shade into each other and self-contained classical containers, each more or less insulated from the others. The fluidness of word-formation arises both from complex processes of change over centuries and from casual usage untouched by theories of language and norms of ‘good’ formation. The American linguist Dwight Bolinger, reflecting on ‘the high informality of word-making in English’, puts the matter as follows:
Practically all words that are not imported bodily from some other language … are made up of old words and their parts. Sometimes those parts are pretty well standardized, like the suffix- ness and the prefix un-. Other times they are only broken pieces that some inventive speaker manages to re-fit … Hamburger yields -burger, which is reattached in nutburger, Gainesburger, and cheeseburger. Cafeteria yields -teria, which is reattached in valeteria, groceteria, and washateria. Trade names make easy use of almost any fragment, like the -roni of macaroni that is reattached in Rice-a-Roni and Noodle-Roni. The fabrication may reuse elements that have been re-used many times, or it may be a one-shot affair such as the punning reference to being a member of the lowerarchy, with -archy extracted from hierarchy. The principle is the same. Scientists and scholars may give themselves airs with high-bred affixes borrowed from classical languages, but they are linguistically no more sophisticated than the common speakers who are satisfied with leftovers from the vernacular (
Aspects of Language, 1968).Word-formation in English operates among hundreds of millions of people, drawing on centuries of complex hybridization and prompting idiosyncrasy in forms and uses. As a result, even the most well-defined categories and patterns identify tendencies rather than absolutes that are thought-lessly ‘flouted’ by the ignorant and insensitive. Around such focal points as compounding and affixation, with their relative certainties, swarm innumerable and unpredictable fringe formations, of longer or shorter duration, such as
lowerarchy,
Rice-a-Roni and
Grandma Tourette.
See
ASSIMILATION,
BISOCIATION,
BORROWING,
BOUND AND FREE,
CLASSICAL COMPOUND,
CLASSICAL ENDING,
COGNATE,
COINAGE,
COMBINING FORM,
COMPLEX WORD,
COMPUTERESE,
COMPUTER USAGE,
CONTRACTION,
DERIVATIVE,
DIMINUTIVE,
DOUBLET,
ELISION,
-EME,
ENDING,
EPONYM,
FORMATIVE,
HARD WORD, INDO-EUROPEAN ROOTS,
INITIAL,
INITIALESE,
INTERFIX,
INTERNATIONAL SCIENTIFIC VOCABULARY,
-ISM, ITERATIVE,
LEXEME,
LOAN,
LONG WORD,
MORPHEME,
MORPHOLOGY,
NEOLOGISM,
NONCE WORD,
NONSENSE,
NOUN-INCORPORATION,
ONOMATOPOEIA,
PHONAESTHESIA,
PLURAL,
PREFIX,
SHAKESPEARE,
-SPEAK,
STEM,
STUNT WORD,
SUFFIX,
TELESCOPING,
THEMATIC VOWEL,
TMESIS,
VOCABULARY.
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
Introduction: Cornelia and her maternal legacy.(Critical essay)
Magazine article from: Helios; 9/22/2006; ; 700+ words
; At De lingua latina 10.41, Marcus Terentius Varro, one of our major authorities...media nox ad noctem). Whether Varro's analogy likens men and their...nighttime, is far from clear. But Varro clearly views Roman mothers as...
|
|
Annual General Meeting of the Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers) 4 June 2007.(Presidential Address: Building resilience)
Magazine article from: The Geographical Journal; 9/1/2007; ; 700+ words
; ...elegantly, defined sustainability was a Roman, Marcus Terentius Varro in the second century BC. Varro was a brilliant Roman who would have been...but we were a bit slow off the mark! Varro said that agriculture is an art and a science...
|
|
PHOTOGRAPHIC MEMORIES NORFOLK WOMAN CHRONICLES VISIONS IN BOOK.(NORFOLK COMPASS)
Newspaper article from: The Virginian Pilot; 7/26/2001; 700+ words
; ...KLEMENC THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT ``The longest part of the journey is said to be the passing of the gate.'' - Marcus Terentius Varro, ancient Roman scholar and prolific writer BRENDA WRIGHT'S JOURNEY began nearly 50 years ago in a three-room...
|
|
Introductory atmospheric sciences at a liberal arts university (1995-99)
Magazine article from: Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society; 10/1/2000; ; 700+ words
; ...and theology known as scholasticism. The seven liberal arts were codified in late antiquity by such writers as Marcus Terentius Varro and Martianus Capella. In medieval times, the seven liberal arts offered a canonical way of depicting the realms...
|
|
Encyclopaedic Visions: Scientific Dictionaries and Enlightenment Culture.(Book Review)
Magazine article from: Albion; 12/22/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...would shape encyclopedias, he refers to encyclopedic surveys or cycles of the seven liberal arts dating from Marcus Terentius Varro's Disciplinarum Libri Novem of about 50 B.C.E. This genre, which experienced a revival during the sixteenth...
|
|
The water's not so fine
Newspaper article from: Yakima Herald-Republic; 2/12/2005; 335 words
; ...laying down the laws for his ideal state, says, "Let there be a law that no deformed child shall be reared." Marcus Terentius Varro (116-27 B.C.), the Roman scholar who rose to the office of praetor, worked with Julius Caesar. In his...
|
|
Marcus Terentius Varro
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
Marcus Terentius Varro Marcus Terentius Varro (116-27 B.C.) was the greatest Roman scholar and an incredibly prolific writer. It is estimated that he wrote 74 separate works in 620 volumes on all aspects of contemporary learning. Varro...
|