Compound word что это

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Алена Пайтылова

Эксперт по предмету «Языки (переводы)»

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Особенности составных слов в английском языке (Compound Words)

Составные слова (Compound words) представляют собой такие слова, которые очень похожи на словосочетания, но являются одной целой отдельной частью речи, обозначающей что-то конкретное. Одна из особенностей составных слов – это их образование от двух совершенно разных по значению слов. Например, brainstorm – мозговой штурм, активная умственная деятельность. Данное слово образовано от слов brain – мозг и storm – шторм, ураган. Это абсолютно разные по значению слова, которые вместе образуют новую лексическую единицу.

Виды сложных слов в английском языке

Следует различать следующие виды сложных слов в английском языке:

  1. Сложные непроизводные (сложные корневые) – слова, образованные сложением двух слов без их внешнего изменения. Home-made — приготовленный дома, hand-made – приготовленный (сделанный) руками, to blacklist – заносить в черный список.
  2. Сложнопроизводные слова – слова, образованные путем сложения двух слов с видоизменением одного из них или обоих слов. green-eyed – зеленоглазый, red-haired – рыжеволосый.
  3. Сложные аббревиатуры (сложносокращенные слова) — аббревиатурные слова, образованные от двух или более отдельных слов. V-Day – День победы, X-mas – Рождество, UAE – ОАЭ (Объединенные Арабские Эмираты).

Сложные слова часто путают со словосочетаниями, которые также являются сложными образованиями, но имеют отличное морфемное и лексическое значение.

Если в русском языке можно четко разграничить и увидеть разницу между словосочетанием и сложным словом, то в английском языке данное действие реализовать достаточно трудно, а иногда невозможно. В русском языке данное явление прослеживается отчетливо за счет внешнего отличия слов, т. е. при образовании сложных слов используется только отдельная часть сова (как правило, корень). В английском же языке данное явление проследить достаточно сложно ввиду одинакового написания и произношения частей слова и самого слова, например, dark- и dark. По этой причине для правильного определения части речи в английском языке требуется специальный лингвистический анализ, а также синтаксический анализ предложения.

Образование составных слов (Compound Words)

Сложные слова в английском языке образуются путем сложения двух разных по значению слов. При этом часть речи объединяемых слов особого значения не имеет, это могут быть существительное + существительное (noun + noun), которые также называют Compound nouns, существительное + глагол, существительное + прилагательное и т. д.

«Особенности составных слов в английском языке (Compound Words)» 👇

Например:

  • background (задний фон) = back (назад) + ground (земля),
  • clockwise (по часовой стрелке) = clock (часы) + wise (мудрый),
  • daredevil (смельчак) = dare (осмелиться) + devil (дьявол),
  • somewhere (где-то) = some (сколько-нибудь) + where (где).

В английской лексике из составных слов наиболее распространены составные существительные, хотя имеются некоторые часто употребляемые слова и других частей речи.

В английском языке можно выделить следующие способы образования сложных слов:

  1. Компрессия предложений и словосочетаний, иными словами сложение нескольких частей предложения в одну часть. Например, do it yourself (сделай это сам) – do-it-yourself principle (принцип самостоятельности); stay slim (оставаться стройным) – stay-slim diet (диета по поддержанию стройности).
  2. Основосложение – образование новых (сложных) слов, при помощи соединения основ нескольких слов или основы одного слова и целого отдельного слова. Например, light-blue – светло-синий, well-known – хорошо известный. В свою очередь можно выделить следующие подвиды основосложения:

    • полноосновные сложные слова, когторые складываются из слова без их изменений. Данным способом образуется большинство сложных слов в английском языке (например, sunglasses – солнечные очки, well-known – хорошо известный);
    • сложносокращенные слова или сложные аббревиатуры, когда складываются усеченные основы слов (например, USA – США, USSR – СССР).

Помимо рассмотренных выше способов образования сложных слов, существует еще один способ, который имеет отличительные характерные черты, не присущие ни одному из вышеупомянутых способов. Подобного рода сложные слова называют нейтральными образованиями. Их характерная черта – это присутствие выраженных признаков, свойственных основосложению и компрессии, но подобные слова не относятся ни к одному, ни к другому способу образования. В нейтральных образованиях также выделяют две группы:

сочетание двух отдельных слов, несвязанных друг с другом (например, pain killer – обезболивающее средство, car park – парковка);
слова с образующей частью, оканчивающейся на –ing (например, washing machine – стиральная машина, sleeping pills – снотворное).

Правила написания сложных слов

Определенных правил написания и составления сложных слов нет. По этой причине, написание сложных слов является исключительным и необходимым для запоминания. Но можно выделить основные случаи написания сложных слов в английском языке:

  • слитно (to babysit, bedroom, somewhere и т. д.);
  • через дефис (mother-in-law, two-year-old, long-haired и т. д.);
  • раздельно (washing machine, to look forward to, football shoe и т. д.)

Ударение в сложных словах

Ударение в сложных словах сохраняется для каждого слова в отдельности и не изменяется в результате сложения слов, но при их произношении выделяется та или иная часть слов, как правило, ударение в данном случае падает на первую образующую часть. Например, políce station – полицейский участок, cár park – парковка.

Однако существуют определенные правила в расстановке ударений при образовании сложных существительных:

  1. Если в сложном существительном присутствует имя собственное, то ударение будет ставиться на первый слог второго слова (например, Mount Éverest – гора Эверест, New Yórk – Нью-Йорк).
  2. При образовании сложного существительного от фразового глагола ударение будет ставиться на первый слог первого слова (например, a cómeback — возвращение, a bréakdown — поломка).

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In linguistics, a compound is a lexeme (less precisely, a word or sign) that consists of more than one stem. Compounding, composition or nominal composition is the process of word formation that creates compound lexemes. Compounding occurs when two or more words or signs are joined to make a longer word or sign. A compound that uses a space rather than a hyphen or concatenation is called an open compound or a spaced compound; the alternative is a closed compound.

The meaning of the compound may be similar to or different from the meaning of its components in isolation. The component stems of a compound may be of the same part of speech—as in the case of the English word footpath, composed of the two nouns foot and path—or they may belong to different parts of speech, as in the case of the English word blackbird, composed of the adjective black and the noun bird. With very few exceptions, English compound words are stressed on their first component stem.

As a member of the Germanic family of languages, English is unusual in that even simple compounds made since the 18th century tend to be written in separate parts. This would be an error in other Germanic languages such as Norwegian, Swedish, Danish, German, and Dutch. However, this is merely an orthographic convention: As in other Germanic languages, arbitrary noun phrases, for example «girl scout troop», «city council member», and «cellar door», can be made up on the spot and used as compound nouns in English too.

For example, German «Donaudampfschifffahrtsgesellschaftskapitän» would be written in English as «Danube steamship transport company captain» and not as «Danubesteamshiptransportcompanycaptain».

The addition of affix morphemes to words (such as suffixes or prefixes, as in employemployment) should not be confused with nominal composition, as this is actually morphological derivation.

Some languages easily form compounds from what in other languages would be a multi-word expression. This can result in unusually long words, a phenomenon known in German (which is one such language) as Bandwurmwörter or tapeworm words.

Sign languages also have compounds. They are created by combining two or more sign stems.

So-called «classical compounds» are compounds derived from classical Latin or ancient Greek roots.

Formation of compoundsEdit

Compound formation rules vary widely across language types.

In a synthetic language, the relationship between the elements of a compound may be marked with a case or other morpheme. For example, the German compound Kapitänspatent consists of the lexemes Kapitän (sea captain) and Patent (license) joined by an -s- (originally a genitive case suffix); and similarly, the Latin lexeme paterfamilias contains the archaic genitive form familias of the lexeme familia (family). Conversely, in the Hebrew language compound, the word בֵּית סֵפֶר bet sefer (school), it is the head that is modified: the compound literally means «house-of book», with בַּיִת bayit (house) having entered the construct state to become בֵּית bet (house-of). This latter pattern is common throughout the Semitic languages, though in some it is combined with an explicit genitive case, so that both parts of the compound are marked, e.g. Arabic عبد الله ʕabd-u l-lāh-i (servant-NOM DEF-god-GEN) «servant of-the-god: the servant of God».

Agglutinative languages tend to create very long words with derivational morphemes. Compounds may or may not require the use of derivational morphemes also. In German, extremely
extendable compound words can be found in the language of chemical compounds, where, in the cases of biochemistry and polymers, they can be practically unlimited in length, mostly because the German rule suggests combining all noun adjuncts with the noun as the last stem. German examples include Farb­fernsehgerät (color television set), Funk­fernbedienung (radio remote control), and the often quoted jocular word Donau­dampfschifffahrts­gesellschafts­kapitänsmütze (originally only two Fs, Danube-Steamboat-Shipping Company captain[‘s] hat), which can of course be made even longer and even more absurd, e.g. Donau­dampfschifffahrts­gesellschafts­kapitänsmützen­reinigungs­ausschreibungs­verordnungs­diskussionsanfang («beginning of the discussion of a regulation on tendering of Danube steamboat shipping company captain hats») etc. According to several editions of the Guinness Book of World Records, the longest published German word has 79 letters and is Donau­dampfschiffahrts­elektrizitäten­hauptbetriebswerkbau­unterbeamten­gesellschaft («Association for Subordinate Officials of the Main Electric[ity] Maintenance Building of the Danube Steam Shipping»), but there is no evidence that this association ever actually existed.

In Finnish, although there is theoretically no limit to the length of compound words, words consisting of more than three components are rare. Even those with fewer than three components can look mysterious[clarification needed] to non-Finnish speakers, such as hätäuloskäynti (emergency exit). Internet folklore sometimes suggests that lentokone­suihkuturbiinimoottori­apumekaanikko­aliupseerioppilas (Airplane jet turbine engine auxiliary mechanic non-commissioned officer student) is the longest word in Finnish, but evidence of its actual use is scant and anecdotal at best.[1]

Compounds can be rather long when translating technical documents from English to some other language, since the lengths of the words are theoretically unlimited, especially in chemical terminology. For example, when translating an English technical document to Swedish, the term «Motion estimation search range settings» can be directly translated to rörelse­uppskattnings­sökintervalls­inställningar, though in reality, the word would most likely be divided in two: sökintervalls­inställningar för rörelse­uppskattning – «search range settings for motion estimation».

SubclassesEdit

Semantic classificationEdit

A common semantic classification of compounds yields four types:

  • endocentric
  • exocentric
  • copulative
  • appositional

An endocentric compound (tatpuruṣa in the Sanskrit tradition) consists of a head, i.e. the categorical part that contains the basic meaning of the whole compound, and modifiers, which restrict this meaning. For example, the English compound doghouse, where house is the head and dog is the modifier, is understood as a house intended for a dog. Endocentric compounds tend to be of the same part of speech (word class) as their head, as in the case of doghouse.

An exocentric compound (bahuvrihi in the Sanskrit tradition) is a hyponym of some unexpressed semantic category (such as a person, plant, or animal): none (neither) of its components can be perceived as a formal head, and its meaning often cannot be transparently guessed from its constituent parts. For example, the English compound white-collar is neither a kind of collar nor a white thing. In an exocentric compound, the word class is determined lexically, disregarding the class of the constituents. For example, a must-have is not a verb but a noun. The meaning of this type of compound can be glossed as «(one) whose B is A», where B is the second element of the compound and A the first. A bahuvrihi compound is one whose nature is expressed by neither of the words: thus a white-collar person is neither white nor a collar (the collar’s colour is a metonym for socioeconomic status). Other English examples include barefoot.

Copulative compounds (dvandva in the Sanskrit tradition) are compounds with two semantic heads, for example in a gradual scale (such a mix of colours).

Appositional compounds are lexemes that have two (contrary or simultaneous) attributes that classify the compound.

Type Description Examples
endocentric A+B denotes a special kind of B darkroom, smalltalk
exocentric A+B denotes a special kind of an unexpressed different semantic meaning C redhead, scarecrow
copulative A+B denotes ‘the sum’ of what A and B denote bittersweet, sleepwalk
appositional A and B provide different descriptions for the same referent hunter-gatherer, maidservant

Syntactic classificationEdit

Noun–noun compoundsEdit

All natural languages have compound nouns. The positioning of the words (i.e. the most common order of constituents in phrases where nouns are modified by adjectives, by possessors, by other nouns, etc.) varies according to the language. While Germanic languages, for example, are left-branching when it comes to noun phrases (the modifiers come before the head), the Romance languages are usually right-branching.

English compound nouns can be spaced, hyphenated, or solid, and they sometimes change orthographically in that direction over time, reflecting a semantic identity that evolves from a mere collocation to something stronger in its solidification. This theme has been summarized in usage guides under the aphorism that «compound nouns tend to solidify as they age»; thus a compound noun such as place name begins as spaced in most attestations and then becomes hyphenated as place-name and eventually solid as placename, or the spaced compound noun file name directly becomes solid as filename without being hyphenated.

German, a fellow West Germanic language, has a somewhat different orthography, whereby compound nouns are virtually always required to be solid or at least hyphenated; even the hyphenated styling is used less now than it was in centuries past.

In French, compound nouns are often formed by left-hand heads with prepositional components inserted before the modifier, as in chemin-de-fer ‘railway’, lit. ‘road of iron’, and moulin à vent ‘windmill’, lit. ‘mill (that works)-by-means-of wind’.

In Turkish, one way of forming compound nouns is as follows: yeldeğirmeni ‘windmill’ (yel: wind, değirmen-i: mill-possessive); demiryolu ‘railway’ (demir: iron, yol-u: road-possessive).

Occasionally, two synonymous nouns can form a compound noun, resulting in a pleonasm. One example is the English word pathway.

Verb–noun compoundsEdit

A type of compound that is fairly common in the Indo-European languages is formed of a verb and its object, and in effect transforms a simple verbal clause into a noun.

In Spanish, for example, such compounds consist of a verb conjugated for the second person singular imperative followed by a noun (singular or plural): e.g., rascacielos (modelled on «skyscraper», lit. ‘scratch skies’), sacacorchos ‘corkscrew’ (lit. ‘pull corks’), guardarropa ‘wardrobe’ (lit. ‘store clothes’). These compounds are formally invariable in the plural (but in many cases they have been reanalyzed as plural forms, and a singular form has appeared). French and Italian have these same compounds with the noun in the singular form: Italian grattacielo ‘skyscraper’, French grille-pain ‘toaster’ (lit. ‘toast bread’).

This construction exists in English, generally with the verb and noun both in uninflected form: examples are spoilsport, killjoy, breakfast, cutthroat, pickpocket, dreadnought, and know-nothing.

Also common in English is another type of verb–noun (or noun–verb) compound, in which an argument of the verb is incorporated into the verb, which is then usually turned into a gerund, such as breastfeeding, finger-pointing, etc. The noun is often an instrumental complement. From these gerunds new verbs can be made: (a mother) breastfeeds (a child) and from them new compounds mother-child breastfeeding, etc.

Verb-noun compounds derived from classical languages tend to be nouns; rarely, a verb-noun classical compound can be a verb. One example is miscegenate, a word that literally falls into disuse nowadays, which is derived from a Latin verb and a Latin noun. In the Australian Aboriginal language Jingulu, a Pama–Nyungan language, it is claimed that all verbs are V+N compounds, such as «do a sleep», or «run a dive», and the language has only three basic verbs: do, make, and run.[2]

A special kind of compounding is incorporation, of which noun incorporation into a verbal root (as in English backstabbing, breastfeed, etc.) is most prevalent (see below).

Verb–verb compoundsEdit

Verb–verb compounds are sequences of more than one verb acting together to determine clause structure. They have two types:

  • In a serial verb, two actions, often sequential, are expressed in a single clause. For example, Ewe trɔ dzo, lit. «turn leave», means «turn and leave», and Hindi जाकर देखो jā-kar dekh-o, lit. «go-CONJUNCTIVE PARTICIPLE see-IMPERATIVE«, means «go and see». In Tamil, a Dravidian language, van̪t̪u paːr, lit. «come see». In each case, the two verbs together determine the semantics and argument structure.

Serial verb expressions in English may include What did you go and do that for?, or He just upped and left; this is however not quite a true compound since they are connected by a conjunction and the second missing arguments may be taken as a case of ellipsis.

  • In a compound verb (or complex predicate), one of the verbs is the primary, and determines the primary semantics and also the argument structure. The secondary verb, often called a vector verb or explicator, provides fine distinctions, usually in temporality or aspect, and also carries the inflection (tense and/or agreement markers). The main verb usually appears in conjunctive participial (sometimes zero) form. For examples, Hindi निकल गया nikal gayā, lit. «exit went», means ‘went out’, while निकल पड़ा nikal paRā, lit. «exit fell», means ‘departed’ or ‘was blurted out’. In these examples निकल nikal is the primary verb, and गया gayā and पड़ा paRā are the vector verbs. Similarly, in both English start reading and Japanese 読み始める yomihajimeru «read-CONJUNCTIVE-start» «start reading», the vector verbs start and 始める hajimeru «start» change according to tense, negation, and the like, while the main verbs reading and 読み yomi «reading» usually remain the same. An exception to this is the passive voice, in which both English and Japanese modify the main verb, i.e. start to be read and 読まれ始める yomarehajimeru lit. «read-PASSIVE-(CONJUNCTIVE)-start» start to be read. With a few exceptions, all compound verbs alternate with their simple counterparts. That is, removing the vector does not affect grammaticality at all nor the meaning very much: निकला nikalā ‘(He) went out.’ In a few languages both components of the compound verb can be finite forms: Kurukh kecc-ar ker-ar lit. «died-3pl went-3pl» ‘(They) died.’
  • Compound verbs are very common in some languages, such as the northern Indo-Aryan languages Hindustani and Punjabi, and Dravidian languages like Tamil, where as many as 20% of verb forms in running text are compound. They exist but are less common in other Indo-Aryan languages like Marathi and Nepali, in Tibeto-Burman languages like Limbu and Newari, in Turkic languages like Turkish and Kyrgyz, in Korean and Japanese, and in northeast Caucasian languages like Tsez and Avar.
  • Under the influence of a Quichua substrate speakers living in the Ecuadorian altiplano have innovated compound verbs in Spanish:
De rabia puso rompiendo la olla, ‘In anger (he/she) smashed the pot.’ (Lit. from anger put breaking the pot)
Botaremos matándote ‘We will kill you.’ (Cf. Quichua huañuchi-shpa shitashun, lit. kill-CP throw.1plFut.
Likewise in Hindi: तेरे को मार डालेंगे tere ko mār DāleNge, lit. «we will kill-throw you»).
  • Compound verb equivalents in English (examples from the internet):
What did you go and do that for?
If you are not giving away free information on your web site then a huge proportion of your business is just upping and leaving.
Big Pig, she took and built herself a house out of brush.
  • Caution: In descriptions of Persian and other Iranian languages the term ‘compound verb’ refers to noun-plus-verb compounds, not to the verb–verb compounds discussed here.

Parasynthetic compoundsEdit

Parasynthetic compounds are formed by a combination of compounding and derivation, with multiple lexical stems and a derivational affix. For example, English black-eyed is composed of black, eye, and -ed ‘having’, with the meaning ‘having a black eye’;[3] Italian imbustare is composed of in- ‘in’, busta ‘envelope’, -are (verbal suffix), with the meaning ‘to put into an envelope’.[4]

Compound adpositionsEdit

Compound prepositions formed by prepositions and nouns are common in English and the Romance languages (consider English on top of, Spanish encima de, etc.). Hindi has a small number of simple (i.e., one-word) postpositions and a large number of compound postpositions, mostly consisting of simple postposition ke followed by a specific postposition (e.g., ke pas, «near»; ke nīche, «underneath»).

Examples from different languagesEdit

Chinese (traditional/simplified Chinese; Standard Chinese Pinyin/Cantonese Jyutping):

  • 學生/学生 ‘student’: 學 xué/hok6 learn + 生 shēng/sang1 living being
  • 太空/太空 ‘space’: 太 tài/taai3 great + 空 kōng/hung1 emptiness
  • 摩天樓/摩天楼 ‘skyscraper’: 摩 /mo1 touch + 天 tiān/tin1 sky + 樓 lóu/lau2 building (with more than 1 storey)
  • 打印機/打印机 ‘printer’: 打 /daa2 strike + 印 yìn/yan3 stamp/print + 機 /gei1 machine
  • 百科全書/百科全书 ‘encyclopaedia’: 百 bǎi/baak3 hundred + 科 /fo1 (branch of) study + 全 quán/cyun4 entire/complete + 書 shū/syu1 book
  • 謝謝/谢谢 ‘thanks’: Repeating of 謝 xiè thank

Dutch:

  • arbeids­ongeschiktheids­verzekering ‘disability insurance’: arbeid ‘labour’ + ongeschiktheid ‘inaptitude’ + verzekering ‘insurance’.
  • rioolwater­zuiverings­installatie ‘sewage treatment plant’: riool ‘sewer’ + water ‘water’ + zuivering ‘cleaning’ + installatie ‘installation’.
  • verjaardags­kalender ‘birthday calendar’: verjaardag ‘birthday’ + kalender ‘calendar’.
  • klantenservice­medewerker ‘customer service representative’: klanten ‘customers’ + service ‘service’ + medewerker ‘worker’.
  • universiteits­bibliotheek ‘university library’: universiteit ‘university’ + bibliotheek ‘library’.
  • doorgroei­mogelijkheden ‘possibilities for advancement’: door ‘through’ + groei ‘grow’ + mogelijkheden ‘possibilities’.

Finnish:

  • sanakirja ‘dictionary’: sana ‘word’ + kirja ‘book’
  • tietokone ‘computer’: tieto ‘knowledge data’ + kone ‘machine’
  • keskiviikko ‘Wednesday’: keski ‘middle’ + viikko ‘week’
  • maailma ‘world’: maa ‘land’ + ilma ‘air’
  • rautatieasema ‘railway station’: rauta ‘iron’ + tie ‘road’ + asema ‘station’
  • kolmivaihe­kilowattitunti­mittari ‘electricity meter’: ‘three-phase kilowatt hour meter’

Sewage-treatment-facility — The German language has many compounds.

German:

  • Wolkenkratzer ‘skyscraper’: Wolken ‘clouds’ + Kratzer ‘scraper’
  • Eisenbahn ‘railway’: Eisen ‘iron’ + Bahn ‘track’
  • Kraftfahrzeug ‘automobile’: Kraft ‘power’ + fahren/fahr ‘drive’ + Zeug ‘machinery’
  • Stacheldraht ‘barbed wire’: Stachel ‘barb/barbed’ + Draht ‘wire’
  • Rinder­kennzeichnungs- und Rindfleisch­etikettierungs­überwachungs­aufgaben­übertragungs­gesetz: literally cattle-marking- and beef-labeling-supervision-duties-delegation law

Ancient Greek:

  • φιλόσοφος philosopher: φίλος phílos ‘beloved’ + σοφία sophíā ‘wisdom’
  • δημοκρατία dēmokratíā ‘democracy’: δῆμος dêmos ‘people’ + κράτος ‘rule’
  • ῥοδοδάκτυλος rhododáktylos ‘rose-fingered’: ῥόδον rhódon ‘rose’ + δάκτυλος dáktylos ‘finger’ (a Homeric epithet applied to the Dawn)

Icelandic:

  • járnbraut ‘railway’: járn ‘iron’ + braut ‘path’ or ‘way’
  • farartæki ‘vehicle’: farar ‘journey’ + tæki ‘apparatus’
  • alfræðiorðabók ‘encyclopedia’: al ‘everything’ + fræði ‘study’ or ‘knowledge’ + orðabók ‘dictionary’ (orða ‘words’ + bók ‘book’)
  • símtal ‘telephone conversation’: sím ‘telephone’ + tal ‘dialogue’

Italian:

  • millepiedi ‘centipede’: mille ‘thousand’ + piedi ‘feet’
  • ferrovia ‘railway’: ferro ‘iron’ + via ‘way’
  • tergicristallo ‘windscreen wiper’: tergere ‘to wash’ + cristallo ‘crystal (pane of) glass’
  • pomodoro: pomo d’oro = apple of Gold = tomatoes
  • portacenere = porta cenere = ashtray

Japanese:

  • 目覚まし(時計) mezamashi(dokei) ‘alarm clock’: 目 me ‘eye’ + 覚まし samashi (-zamashi) ‘awakening (someone)’ (+ 時計 tokei (-dokei) clock)
  • お好み焼き okonomiyaki: お好み okonomi ‘preference’ + 焼き yaki ‘cooking’
  • 日帰り higaeri ‘day trip’: 日 hi ‘day’ + 帰り kaeri (-gaeri) ‘returning (home)’
  • 国会議事堂 kokkaigijidō ‘national diet building’: 国会 kokkai ‘national diet’ + 議事 giji ‘proceedings’ + 堂 ‘hall’

Korean:

  • 안팎 anpak ‘inside and outside’: 안 an ‘inside’ + 밖 bak ‘outside’ (As two nouns compound the consonant sound ‘b’ fortifies into ‘p’ becoming 안팎 anpak rather than 안밖 anbak)

Ojibwe/Anishinaabemowin:

  • mashkikiwaaboo ‘tonic’: mashkiki ‘medicine’ + waaboo ‘liquid’
  • miskomin ‘raspberry’: misko ‘red’ + miin ‘berry’
  • dibik-giizis ‘moon’: dibik ‘night’ + giizis ‘sun’
  • gichi-mookomaan ‘white person/American’: gichi ‘big’ + mookomaan ‘knife’

Spanish:

  • ciencia-ficción ‘science fiction’: ciencia, ‘science’, + ficción, ‘fiction’ (This word is a calque from the English expression science fiction. In English, the head of a compound word is the last morpheme: science fiction. Conversely, the Spanish head is located at the front, so ciencia ficción sounds like a kind of fictional science rather than scientific fiction.)
  • ciempiés ‘centipede’: cien ‘hundred’ + pies ‘feet’
  • ferrocarril ‘railway’: ferro ‘iron’ + carril ‘lane’
  • paraguas ‘umbrella’: para ‘stops’ + aguas ‘(the) water’
  • cabizbajo ‘keeping the head low in a bad mood’: cabeza ‘head’ + bajo ‘down’
  • subibaja ‘seesaw’ (contraction of sube y baja ‘goes up and down’)
  • limpiaparabrisas ‘windshield wiper’ is a nested compound:[5] limpia ‘clean’ + parabrisas windshield, which is itself a compound of para ‘stop’ + brisas ‘breezes’.

Tamil:

  • In Cemmozhi (Classical Tamil), rules for compounding are laid down in grammars such as Tolkappiyam and Nannūl, in various forms, under the name punarcci. Examples of compounds include kopuram from ‘kō’ (king) + ‘puram’ (exterior). Sometimes phonemes may be inserted during the blending process such as in kovil from ‘kō’ (king) + ‘il’ (home). Other types are like vennai (butter) from ‘veḷḷai’ (white) + ‘nei’ (ghee); note how ‘veḷḷai’ becomes ‘ven’.
  • In koṭuntamizh (Non-standard Tamil), parts of words from other languages may be morphed into Tamil. Common examples include ‘ratta-azhuttam’ (blood pressure) from the Sanskrit rakta (blood) and Cemmozhi ‘azhuttam’ (pressure); note how rakta becomes ratta in Tamil order to remove the consonant-cluster. This also happens with English, for examples kāpi-kaṭai (coffee shop) is from English coffee, which becomes kāpi in Tamil, and the Tamil kaṭai meaning shop.

Tłįchǫ Yatiì/Dogrib:

  • dlòotsǫ̀ǫ̀ ‘peanut butter’: dlòo ‘squirrel’ + tsǫ̀ǫ̀ ‘dung’
  • eyakǫ̀ ‘hospital: eya ‘sick’ + kǫ̀ ‘house’
  • dè gotłeè ‘kerosene’: ‘land’ + gotłeè ‘its fat’
  • dǫ łèt’è ‘bannock’: ‘[Aboriginal] people’ + łèt’è ‘bread’

Germanic languagesEdit

In Germanic languages (including English), compounds are formed by prepending what is effectively a namespace (disambiguation context) to the main word. For example, «football» would be a «ball» in the «foot» context. In itself, this does not alter the meaning of the main word. The added context only makes it more precise. As such, a «football» must be understood as a «ball». However, as is the case with «football», a well established compound word may have gained a special meaning in the language’s vocabulary. Only this defines «football» as a particular type of ball (unambiguously the round object, not the dance party, at that), and also the game involving such a ball. Another example of special and altered meaning is «starfish» – a starfish is in fact not a fish in modern biology. Also syntactically, the compound word behaves like the main word – the whole compound word (or phrase) inherits the word class and inflection rules of the main word. That is to say, since «fish» and «shape» are nouns, «starfish» and «star shape» must also be nouns, and they must take plural forms as «starfish» and «star shapes», definite singular forms as «the starfish» and «the star shape», and so on. This principle also holds for languages that express definiteness by inflection (as in North Germanic).

Because a compound is understood as a word in its own right, it may in turn be used in new compounds, so forming an arbitrarily long word is trivial. This contrasts to Romance languages, where prepositions are more used to specify word relationships instead of concatenating the words. As a member of the Germanic family of languages, English is unusual in that compounds are normally written in separate parts. This would be an error in other Germanic languages such as Norwegian, Swedish, Danish, German and Dutch. However, this is merely an orthographic convention: As in other Germanic languages, arbitrary noun phrases, for example «girl scout troop», «city council member», and «cellar door», can be made up on the spot and used as compound nouns in English too.

Russian languageEdit

In the Russian language compounding is a common type of word formation, and several types of compounds exist, both in terms of compounded parts of speech and of the way of the formation of a compound.[6]

Compound nouns may be agglutinative compounds, hyphenated compounds (стол-книга ‘folding table’, lit. ‘table-book’, «book-like table»), or abbreviated compounds (acronyms: колхоз ‘kolkhoz’). Some compounds look like acronym, while in fact they are an agglutinations of type stem + word: Академгородок ‘Akademgorodok’ (from akademichesky gorodok ‘academic village’). In agglutinative compound nouns, an agglutinating infix is typically used: пароход ‘steamship’: пар + о + ход. Compound nouns may be created as noun+noun, adjective + noun, noun + adjective (rare), noun + verb (or, rather, noun + verbal noun).

Compound adjectives may be formed either per se (бело-розовый ‘white-pink’) or as a result of compounding during the derivation of an adjective from a multi-word term: Каменноостровский проспект ([kəmʲɪnnʌʌˈstrovskʲɪj prʌˈspʲɛkt]) ‘Stone Island Avenue’, a street in St.Petersburg.

Reduplication in Russian is also a source of compounds.

Quite a few Russian words are borrowed from other languages in an already-compounded form, including numerous «classical compounds» or internationalisms: автомобиль ‘automobile’.

Sanskrit languageEdit

Sanskrit is very rich in compound formation with seven major compound types and as many as 55 sub-types.[7] The compound formation process is productive, so it is not possible to list all Sanskrit compounds in a dictionary. Compounds of two or three words are more frequent, but longer compounds with some running through pages are not rare in Sanskrit literature.[7] Some examples are below (hyphens below show individual word boundaries for ease of reading but are not required in original Sanskrit).

  • हिमालय (IAST Himālaya, decomposed as hima-ālaya): Name of the Himalaya mountain range. Literally the abode of snow.[8] A compound of two words and four syllables.
  • प्रवर-मुकुट-मणि-मरीचि-मञ्जरी-चय-चर्चित-चरण-युगल (IAST pravara-mukuṭa-maṇi-marīci-mañjarī-caya-carcita-caraṇa-yugala): Literally, O the one whose dual feet are covered by the cluster of brilliant rays from the gems of the best crowns, from the Sanskrit work Panchatantra.[7] A compound of nine words and 25 syllables.
  • कमला-कुच-कुङ्कुम-पिञ्जरीकृत-वक्षः-स्थल-विराजित-महा-कौस्तुभ-मणि-मरीचि-माला-निराकृत-त्रि-भुवन-तिमिर (IAST kamalā-kuca-kuṅkuma-piñjarīkṛta-vakṣaḥ-sthala-virājita-mahā-kaustubha-maṇi-marīci-mālā-nirākṛta-tri-bhuvana-timira): Literally O the one who dispels the darkness of three worlds by the shine of Kaustubha jewel hanging on the chest, which has been made reddish-yellow by the saffron from the bosom of Kamalā (Lakshmi), an adjective of Rama in the Kakabhushundi Rāmāyaṇa.[9] A compound of 16 words and 44 syllables.
  • साङ्ख्य-योग-न्याय-वैशेषिक-पूर्व-मीमांसा-वेदान्त-नारद-शाण्डिल्य-भक्ति-सूत्र-गीता-वाल्मीकीय-रामायण-भागवतादि-सिद्धान्त-बोध-पुरः-सर-समधिकृताशेष-तुलसी-दास-साहित्य-सौहित्य-स्वाध्याय-प्रवचन-व्याख्यान-परम-प्रवीणाः (IAST sāṅkhya-yoga-nyāya-vaiśeṣika-pūrva-mīmāṃsā-vedānta-nārada-śāṇḍilya-bhakti-sūtra-gītā-vālmīkīya-rāmāyaṇa-bhāgavatādi-siddhānta-bodha-puraḥ-sara-samadhikṛtāśeṣa-tulasī-dāsa-sāhitya-sauhitya-svādhyāya-pravacana-vyākhyāna-parama-pravīṇāḥ): Literally the acclaimed forerunner in understanding of the canons of Sāṅkhya, Yoga, Nyāya, Vaiśeṣika, Pūrva Mīmāṃsā, Vedānta, Nārada Bhakti Sūtra, Śāṇḍilya Bhakti Sūtra, Bhagavad Gītā, the Ramayana of Vālmīki, Śrīmadbhāgavata; and the most skilled in comprehensive self-study, discoursing and expounding of the complete works of Gosvāmī Tulasīdāsa.[10] An adjective used in a panegyric of Jagadguru Rambhadracharya. The hyphens show only those word boundaries where there is no sandhi. On including word boundaries with sandhi (vedānta=veda-anta, rāmāyaṇa=rāma-ayana, bhāgavatādi=bhāgavata-ādi, siddhānta=siddha-anta, samadhikṛtāśeṣa=samadhikṛta-aśeṣa, svādhyāya=sva-adhyāya), this is a compound of 35 words and 86 syllables.

Sign languagesEdit

Also in sign languages, compounding is a productive word formation process. Both endocentric and exocentric compounds have been described for a variety of sign languages.[11] Copulative compounds or dvandva, which are composed of two or more nouns from the same semantic category to denote that semantic category, also occur regularly in many sign languages. The sign for parents in Italian Sign Language, for instance, is a combination of the nouns ‘father’ and ‘mother’. The sign for breakfast in American Sign Language follows the same concept. The words eat and morning are signed together to create a new word meaning breakfast.[12] This is an example of a sequential compound; in sign languages, it is also possible to form simultaneous compounds, where one hand represents one lexeme while the other simultaneously represents another lexeme. An example is the sign for weekend in Sign Language of the Netherlands, which is produced by simultaneously signing a one-handed version of the sign for Saturday and a one-handed version of the sign for Sunday.[11] In American Sign Language there is another process easily compared to compounding. Blending is the blending of two morphemes to create a new word called a portmanteau.[13] This is different from compounding in that it breaks the strict linear order of compounding. [14]

Recent trends in orthographyEdit

Although there is no universally agreed-upon guideline regarding the use of compound words in the English language, in recent decades written English has displayed a noticeable trend towards increased use of compounds.[15] Recently, many words have been made by taking syllables of words and compounding them, such as pixel (picture element) and bit (binary digit). This is called a syllabic abbreviation.

In Dutch and the Scandinavian languages there is an unofficial trend toward splitting compound words, known in Norwegian as særskriving, in Swedish as särskrivning (literally «separate writing»), and in Dutch as Engelse ziekte (the «English disease»). Because the Dutch language and the Scandinavian languages rely heavily on the distinction between the compound word and the sequence of the separate words it consists of, this has serious implications. For example, the Danish adjective røykfritt (literally «smokefree», meaning no smoking allowed) if separated into its composite parts, would mean røyk fritt («smoke freely»). In Dutch, compounds written with spaces may also be confused, but can also be interpreted as a sequence of a noun and a genitive (which is unmarked in Dutch) in formal abbreviated writing. This may lead to, for example, commissie vergadering («commission meeting») being read as «commission of the meeting» rather than «meeting of the commission» (normally spelled commissievergadering).

The German spelling reform of 1996 introduced the option of hyphenating compound nouns when it enhances comprehensibility and readability. This is done mostly with very long compound words by separating them into two or more smaller compounds, like Eisenbahn-Unterführung (railway underpass) or Kraftfahrzeugs-Betriebsanleitung (car manual). Such practice is also permitted in other Germanic languages, e.g. Danish and Norwegian (Bokmål and Nynorsk alike), and is even encouraged between parts of the word that have very different pronunciation, such as when one part is a loan word or an acronym.

Compounding by languageEdit

  • Classical compounds
  • English compounds
  • German compounds
  • Sanskrit compounds

See alsoEdit

  • Compound modifier
  • Bracketing paradox
  • Etymological calque
  • Genitive connector
  • Incorporation (linguistics)
  • Kenning
  • Multiword expression
  • Neologism
  • Noun adjunct
  • Phono-semantic matching
  • Portmanteau compounds
  • Status constructus
  • Syllabic abbreviation
  • Tweebuffelsmeteenskootmorsdoodgeskietfontein, South African placename
  • Word formation
  • Univerbation: a phrase becomes a word

NotesEdit

  1. ^ «Seattle FinnFest ’09».
  2. ^ R. Pensalfini, Jingulu Grammar, Dictionary and Texts, PhD thesis (MIT, 1992), 138–9.
  3. ^ Oxford English Dictionary, Third Edition, June 2005 s.v.
  4. ^ Chiara Melloni, Antonietta Bisetto, «Parasynthetic compounds: data and theory», in Sergio Scalies, Irene Vogel, eds., Cross-Disciplinary Issues in Compounding, ISBN 9789027248275, 2010, p. 199-218
  5. ^ «Diccionario De La Lengua Española : limpiaparabrisas». Real Academia Española. Retrieved 16 February 2013.
  6. ^ Student Dictionary of Compound Words of the Russian Language(1978) ISBN 0-8285-5190-1
  7. ^ a b c Kumar, Anil; Mittal, Vipul; Kulkarni, Amba (2010). «Sanskrit Compound Processor». In Jha, Girish Nath (ed.). Sanskrit Computational Linguistics: 4th International Symposium, New Delhi, India, December 10–12, 2010: Proceedings (Volume 6465 of Lecture Notes in Computer Science / Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence Series). Springer. pp. 57–69. ISBN 978-3-642-17527-5.
  8. ^ Harper, Douglas. «Himalaya». Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved 2011-07-17.
  9. ^ Kumar, Animesh (May 23, 2007). «Sruti Krta Rama Stuti». Stutimandal.com. Retrieved July 1, 2011.
  10. ^ «Virudavali – Jagadguru Rambhadracharya». Shri Tulsi Peeth Seva Nyas. Retrieved October 25, 2011.
  11. ^ a b Quer, Josep; Cecchetto, Carlo; Donati, Caterina; Geraci, Carlo, eds. (2017-11-20). «Part 4: Morphology». Sign Gram Blueprint. SignGram Blueprint. De Gruyter. pp. 163–270. doi:10.1515/9781501511806-009. ISBN 9781501511806. Retrieved 2019-02-19.
  12. ^ «compounding in american sign language — Google Search». www.google.com. Retrieved 2022-10-25.
  13. ^ «Word formation: compounding and blending in sign language». www.handspeak.com. Retrieved 2022-10-25.
  14. ^ Hill, Joseph C. (2017). «Deaf Culture: Exploring Deaf Communities in the United States by Irene W. Leigh, Jean F. Andrews, and Raychelle L. Harris». Sign Language Studies. 18 (1): 162–165. doi:10.1353/sls.2017.0025. ISSN 1533-6263. S2CID 148714617.
  15. ^ Sedivy, Julie (2017-11-16). «The Rise and Fall of the English Sentence». Nautilus. Retrieved 2020-08-02.

ReferencesEdit

  • Kortmann, Bernd: English Linguistics: Essentials, Cornelsen, Berlin 2005.
  • The Oxford Handbook of Compounding, eds. Lieber, Rochelle & Pavol Štekauer, 2009. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Plag, Ingo: Word-formation in English, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2003.
  • Scalise Sergio & Irene Vogel (eds.) (2010), Cross-Disciplinary Issues in Compounding, Amsterdam, Benjamins.

External linksEdit

  • Compound word, encyclopedia.com
  • Compounds and multi-word expressions in the languages of Europe by Rita Finkbeiner and Barbara Schlücker, 2019
    • Compounds and multi-word expressions in English by Laurie Bauer, 2019
    • Compounds and multi-word expressions in Finnish by Irma Hyvärinen, 2019
    • Compounds and multi-word expressions in French by Kristel Van Goethem, 2018
    • Compounds and multi-word expressions in German by Barbara Schlücker, 2019
    • Compounds and multi-word expressions in Greek by Maria Koliopoulou, 2019
    • Compounds and multi-word expressions in Hungarian by Ferenc Kiefer, 2019
    • Compounds and multi-word expressions in Italian by Francesca Masini, 2019
    • Compounds and multi-word expressions in Polish by Bozena Cetnarowska, 2019
    • Compounds and multi-word expressions in Russian by Ingeborg Ohnheiser, 2019
    • Compounds and multi-word expressions in Spanish by Jesús Fernández-Domínguez, 2019

Составные слова (Compound Words) в английском составляют немалый пласт повседневной лексики. 

Они образуются из двух слов абсолютно разных по значению и часто принадлежащих к разным частям речи, к примеру, слово notebook = note (глагол «записывать») + book (существительное «книга») 

Сегодня мы ознакомимся с понятием составных слов в английском языке и выучим много примеров, таким образом заметно пополнив свой английский словарный запас. 

Образование составных слов в английском 

Повторюсь еще раз, что составные слова образуются из двух слов и в итоге дают новую лексическую единицу. Очень часто под составными словами подразумевают сложные существительные (Compound Nouns).

Но это не совсем верно, ведь среди составных слов встречаются и прилагательные, к примеру: fire-resistant (огнеустойчивый), high-speed (высокоскоростной) и т.д. 

Что касается правописания английских составных слов, существует несколько вариантов: слитно, раздельно и через дефис.

Если стоит вопрос выбора как писать то или иное составное слово — через дефис или раздельно, преимущественным будет вариант раздельного написания.

Примеры составных английских слов

  • Brainstorm — мозговой штурм  
  • Scapegoat — козел отпущения  
  • Aftermath — последствия  
  • Backfire — обратный результат 
  • Daredevil — смельчак  
  • Frostbite — обморожение
  • Iron clad — нерушимые правила
  • Lighthearted — беззаботный, счастливый
  • Milestone — этап прогресса 
  • Outlaw — бандит, беглец
  • Panhandle — попрошайничать
  • Wholesale — оптовая торговля 
  • Sunflower — подсолнух 
  • Backbone — хребет
  • Sweetmeat — леденец 
  • Lifeboat — спасательная шлюбка 
  • Horseshoe — подкова 
  • Greenhouse — теплица
  • Lighthouse — маяк
  • Jellyfish — медуза
  • Traffic jam — пробка на дороге
  • Grown-up — взрослый
  • Also-ran — неудачник
  • Headache — головная боль 
  • Toothbrush — зубная щетка

Ударение в составных словах 

Как правило ударение в составных словах ставится на первый слог. Это позволяет отличать составные слова от словосочетаний, к примеру, greenhouse и green house.

На самом деле, составных слов в английском языке очень много, возможно, вы просто никогда не обращали на них внимания.

И с каждым днем их становится все больше, потому что люди невольно придумывают их, сливая два слова в одно.

А какие составные английские слова знаете вы?

1. The criteria of compounds

2. Semi-affixes

3. Classification of compounds

I

Compound
words are words consisting of at least two stems which occur in the
language as free forms.

In
describing the structure of a compound one should examine three types
of relations, namely the relations of the members to each other; the
relations of the whole to its members; and the correlation with
equivalent free phrases.

Some
compounds are made up of a determining and a determined part, which
may be called the determinant and the determinatum.

E.g.
A compound is indivisible. It’s impossible to insert words or
word-groups between its members.

A
sunbeam, a bright sunbeam, a bright and unexpected sunbeam. But no
insertion is possible between sun and beam, for they are not words
they are morphemes. The second stem beam is the basic part the
determinatum.
The determinant serves to differentiate it from other beams.

The
determinatum is the grammatically most important part which undergoes
inflection: sunbeams, brothers- in –law, passers-by etc.

As
for the semantics of the compounds, their meanings are not a mere sum
of the meanings of their components. A compound is often very
different in meaning from a corresponding syntactic group.

E.g.
blackboard and black board not every black board is a teaching aid
and vice-versa.

On
the other hand there are non-idiomatic compounds with a perfectly
clear motivation. Here we add the meanings of constituents to create
the meaning of a whole.

E.g.
seaman – when was first used there was no doubt (a profession
connected with sea).

As
English compounds consist of free forms, it is difficult to
distinguish them from phrases.

E.g.
phrase “the top dog” – a person occupying the foremost place;

a
compound “underdog” – a person who has the worst of an
encounter.

Thus
separating compounds from phrases and also from derivatives is no
easy task, and scholars are not agreed upon the question of relevant
criteria.

E.Nida
writes, that “the criteria for determining the word units in a
language are of three types: 1) phonological; 2) morphological; 3)
syntactic. No one type of criteria is normally sufficient for
establishing the word unit. Rather the combination of two or three
types is essential”.

He
doesn’t mention the graphic criterion (namely spelling). It is a
mistake, in ME the written form is as important as the oral.

We
can see in the dictionaries of different authors and even of the same
author that some words are spelled differently: headmaster –
head-master, airline – air line – air line.

The
lack of infirmity in spelling is the chief reason why many authors
consider this criterion insufficient. Some combine it with the phonic
criterion or stress.

There
is a marked tendency in English to give compounds a heavy stress on
the first element. Some scholars consider this unity of stress to be
of primary importance.

Thus,
Bloomfield writes: ”Wherever we hear lesser or least stress upon a
word which would always show a high stress in a phrase, we describe
it as a compound member: `ice-cream is a compound but `ice `cream is
a phrase although there is no denotative difference in meaning.

E.g.
`blackboard, `black `board; `blackbird, `black `bird etc.

This
rule doesn’t hold good with adjectives. Compound adjectives are
double stressed: `gray-`green, `easy-`going, `new-`born.

Adjectives
expressing emphatic comparison are heavily stressed on the first
element: `snow-white, `dog-cheap.

Moreover,
stress can be no help in solving the problem of compounds because
word stress may depend on phrasal stress or upon syntactic function
of the compound.

E.g.
light-headed has a single stress when it’s used attributively, in
other cases the stress is even.

Besides,
the stress may be phonological and help to differentiate the meaning
of compounds:

`overwork
– “extra work”

`over
`work – “hard work injuring ones health”

`bookcase
– “a piece of furniture”

`book
`case – “ a paper cover for books”

As
for morphological criteria they are manifold.

Smirnitsky
compares the compound shipwreck
and the phrase (the)
wreck of (a) ship
.
They comprise the same morphemes. Although they don’t differ in
meaning, they stand in different relation to the grammatical system
of the language. From this example it follows that a word is
characterized by structural integrity non-existent in a phrase.

We
should remember E.Nida that no one type of criteria is normally
sufficient for establishing whether the unit is a compound or a
phrase. We have to depend on the combination of different types of
criteria. But even then the ground is not very safe and we meet here
a “stone-wall problem” that has received so much attention in
linguistic literature.

II

The
problem of distinguishing a compound from a derivative is actually
equivalent to distinguishing a stem from an affix.

In
most cases the task is simple enough. The immediate constituents of a
compound are free forms and a combination containing bound forms as
its immediate constituents, is a derivative.

But
there are cases which present difficulties.

Thus
such nouns as man, berry, land are very often used as the second
element in a word. They seem to have acquired valency similar to that
of affixes. As you remember they are called semi-affixes. Such
elements as –like, -proof, and –worthy can be referred to as
semi-affixes as well.

III

Classification
of compounds

The
great variety of compound types brings about a great variety of
classifications. Compound words can be classified according to the
type of a composition and the linking element; according to the
number of stems; according to the number of constituent parts;
according to the part of speech to which the compound belongs;
according to the structural pattern within a part of speech.

The
classification according to the type of composition permits us to
establish the following groups:

1)
The predominant type without any linking element: heartache,
heart-brake.

2)
Composition with a vowel or a consonant as a linking element:
speedometer,
statesman.

3)
Compounds with linking elements presented by preposition or
conjunction stems: matter-of-fact; up-to-date; son-in-law;
forget-me-not; what’s-her-name (n).

4)
Compound-derivatives or derivational compounds: kind-hearted;
old-timer;
teenager.

The
classification of compounds according to the structure of immediate
constituents distinguishes:

1.Compounds
consisting of simple stems: film-star

2.Compounds
where one of the constituents is a derived stem: chaine-smoker.

3.Compounds
where at least one of members is a clipped stem: maths-mistress;
H-bag (handbag) or X mas (Christmas).

4.Compounds
in which at least one of the constituents is a compound stem:
wastwpaper-basket.

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Compound words. Сложные слова.

Эта тема относится к грамматике, но я размещаю ее в разделе «Лексика», так как больший интерес представляет не то, как именно образуются сложные слова (такой способ словообразования нам знаком из русского языка), а то, что полученные слова означают.

В английском языке есть слова, образованные сложением двух или более полнозначных слов или их основ. Сочетаться между собой при этом могут разные части речи, т.е. существительное + существительное, прилагательное + существительное, существительное + глагол и т.д. Пишутся сложные слова слитно, через дефис или двумя отдельными словами. Определенных правил написания таких слов нет. Например, встречается как «English-speaking», так и «English speaking» countries. Нередко значение сложного  слова отличается от значений слов, входящих в его состав. Сравните: a green house – зеленый дом; a greenhouse – теплица, парник. Обратите внимание на ударение: в сложном слове оно обычно падает на первый слог. В британском и американском английском одни и те же понятия иногда передаются разными сложными словами. Это не удивительно, так как и те слова, с помощью которых образованы новые, у них тоже отличаются. Например,если в AmE «почта» — «mail», а в BrE «post», то и слово «почтальон» в первом случае будет «mailman», а во-втором «postman».

Попробуйте выполнить следующее задание.

Если слово из первого столбика соединить со словом из второго, то у вас получится сложное слово, которое находится в третьем столбике. Трудность заключается в том, что все слова заменены картинками и расположены не по порядку. Ниже смотрите ответы.

 

Ответы

А теперь посмотрите на другие сложные слова. Можете ли вы догадаться о их значении?

aircraft

drugstore

jellyfish

runway

airfield

earphone

jigsaw

saucepan

airmail

earring

ladybird

seashell

armchair

eyelid

leftovers

shellfish

background

eyewitness

letterhead

shoplifter

backside

farmhouse

lighthouse

shorthand

bankbook

fatherhood

lipstick

shotgun

banknote

feedback

mailbox

sickbed

barman

fingernail

neighbourhood

sidewalk

baseball

fingerprint

network

silkworm

bathroom

freeway

newsletter

skullcap

blackbird

fruitcake

newspaper

skyscraper

blacklist

ghostwriter

nightclub

snowball

bulldog

godfather

nightmare

snowfall

bullfight

goldfish

notebook

softball

catfish

greenhouse

outlook

songbird

chairman

guidebook

overcoat

soundtrack

clockwork

guideline

overseas

spaceship

clotheshorse

gunfire

overtime

sportsman

clothesline

gunpowder

painkiller

tablespoon

copycat

hairdresser

pancake

teaspoon

copyright

handbag

paperback

watchdog

crossroad

handshake

passport

wheelchair

daybreak

handwriting

password

windpipe

daytime

headlight

penknife

stalemate

deadline

headquarters

pickpocket

stepchild

deadlock

heartbeat

pigtail

stopwatch

dishwasher

highway

pocketknife

suitcase

doorbell

homework

quicksand

summertime

downfall

honeymoon

racehorse

sunspot

drawback

horsepower

rainbow

sweetheart

dressmaker

housework

rattlesnake

teardrop

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