In what way can one analyze a word

morphemes (DWM). In modern English they are frequently referred to as phrasal verbs.

To sum it up, FWM and DWM are a very outstanding grammatical feature of analytical languages such as English.

4. Structural point of view: it is presupposed that morphemes fall into three types: free morphemes which can stand alone as words in isolation (e.g. friendly, friendship); bound morphemes that occur only as word constituents (e.g. resist, deceive, misinterpret, etc.); semi-bound morphemes which can function both as affixes and as free morphemes (compare, e.g. well-known, herself, after-thought and well, self, after).

In modern English there are many morphemes of Greek and Latin origin possessing a definite lexical meaning though not used autonomously, e.g. tele-

“far”(television), -scope “seeing”(microscope), -graph ‘writing”(typography).

Such morphemes are called combining forms – bound linguistic forms though in Greek and Latin they functioned as independent words. They are particularly frequent in the specialized vocabularies of arts and sciences.

5.Affixes are also classified from the etymological POV into two large groups: native and borrowed.

Some Especially Frequent Native Suffixes

-er

worker, miner, teacher, painter,

-ness

coldness, loneliness, loveliness,

-ing

feeling, meaning, singing,

reading, etc.

-forming

-dom

freedom, wisdom, kingdom, etc.

-hood

childhood, manhood,

motherhood, etc.

Noun

-ship

friendship, companionship,

mastership, etc.

-th

length, breadth, health, truth,

-ful

careful, joyful, wonderful,

sinful, skilful, etc.

-less

careless, helpless, cloudless,

-forming

etc.

-y

cozy, tidy, merry, snowy, etc.

-ish

English, Spanish, reddish,

Adjective

childish, etc.

-ly

lonely, lovely, ugly, likely, etc.

-en

woolen, silken, golden, etc.

-some

handsome, quarrelsome,

tiresome, etc.

Verb

-en

redden, darken, sadden, etc.

Adverb

-ly

warmly, hardly, simply, etc.

forming

Some Especially Frequent Borrowed Affixes

Latin Affixes

The prefix –dis

disable, disagree, disown, etc.

The suffix -able

curable, capable, adorable, etc.

The suffix -ate

congratulate, create, appreciate, etc

The suffix –ute

contribute, constitute, attribute, etc.

The remnant suffix -ct

conduct, collect, act, etc.

The remnant suffix –d(e)

applaud, include, divide, etc.

The suffix -ant

constant, important, arrogant, etc.

The suffix -ion

opinion, legion, union, etc.

The suffix –tion

temptation, relation, revolution, etc.

The suffix -ent

absent, evident, decent, etc.

The suffix -or

junior, major, senior, etc.

The suffix -al

fraternal, maternal, cordial, etc.

The suffix -ar

familiar, solar, lunar, etc.

French Affixes

The prefix –en

enable, ensure, enfoldment, etc.

The suffix -ous

joyous, courageous, serious, etc.

The suffix -ess

hostess, tigress, adventuress, etc

The suffix -age

village, passage, marriage, etc.

The suffix -ment

establishment, settlement, etc.

The suffix -ence

patience, intelligence, reference, etc.

The suffix -ance

Entrance, hindrance, endurance, etc.

To enter the morphological system of the English language a borrowed affix has to meet certain criteria. The borrowing of affixes is possible only if the number of words containing this affix is considerable, if its meaning and function are definite and clear enough, and also if its structural pattern corresponds to the structural pattern already existing in the language.

6. Productivity POV: affixes can also be classified into productive and nonproductive types. Productivity is the ability to form new words after existing patterns which are readily understood by the speakers of a language. By productive affixes we mean those which take part in deriving new words in this particular period of language development. The best way to identify productive affixes is to look for them among neologisms and the so-called nonce-words, i. e. words coined and used only for this particular occasion. The latter are usually

formed on the level of living speech and reflect the most progressive patterns in word-formation. When a literary critic writes about a certain book that it is an unputdownable thriller, we will seek in vain this impressive adjective in dictionaries, for it is a nonce-word coined on the current pattern of Modern English and is evidence of the high productivity of the adjective-forming borrowed suffix — able and the native prefix un-.

In this connection, consider, for example, the following: Professor Pringle was a

thinnish, baldish, dispep-tic-lookingish cove with an eye like a haddock. (From

Right-Ho, Jeeves by P. G. Wodehouse) The adjectives thinnish, baldish bring to mind other adjectives made with the same suffix: mannish, girlish, fattish, longish, yellowish, etc. But dispeptic-lookingish is the author’s creation aimed at a humorous effect, and, at the same time, proving beyond doubt that the suffix -ish is a live and active one.

The same is well illustrated by the following popular statement: «I don’t like Sunday evenings: I feel so Mondayish». {Mondayish is certainly a nonce-word.)

One should not confuse the productivity of affixes with their frequency of occurrence. There are quite a number of high-frequency affixes which, nevertheless, are no longer used in word-derivation (e. g. the adjective-forming native suffixes -ful, -ly; the adjective-forming suffixes of Latin origin -ant, -ent, — al).

Some Productive Affixes

Noun-forming

-er, -ing, -ness, -ism1

suffixes

(materialism), -ist

(impressionist), -ance

Adjective-forming

-y, -ish, -ed (learned),

suffixes

able, -less

Adverb-forming

-ly

Verb-forming

-ize/-ise (realize), -ate

Prefixes

un- (unhappy), re-

(reconstruct), dis-

Some Non-Productive Affixes

Noun-forming suffixes

-th, -hood

Adjective-forming

-ly, -some, -en, -ous

Verb-forming suffix

-en

The native noun-forming suffixes -dom and -ship ceased to be productive centuries ago. Yet, Professor I. V. Arnold in “The English Word” gives some examples of comparatively new formations with the suffix -dom: boredom, serfdom, slavedom. The same is true about -ship (e. g. salesmanship, companionship). The adjective-forming extremely productive -ish has comparatively recently regained it, after having been non-productive for many

centuries. In other words, in the course of time the productivity of this or that way of word-formation and its corresponding affixational constituents may change.

Though English has many affixes, new word-building formative means continue appearing, among them the so-called affixoids. They have emerged due to affixalization of components of compound words (e.g. -(a)holic: workaholic, politicoholic; -head and -junkie: film-junkie, cyberhead; -friendly: customerfriendly, user-friendly; -watcher: Wall Street-watcher, newswatcher, etc.)

PRACTICE 1

1.In what way can one analyze a word a) socially, b) linguistically?

2.What are the structural aspects of the word?

3.What is the external structure of the word irresistible? What is the internal structure of this word?

4.What is understood by formal unity of a word? Why is it not quite correct to say that a word is indivisible?

5.Explain why the word blackboard can be considered a unity and why the combination of words a black board doesn’t possess such a unity.

6.What is understood by the semantic unity of a word? Which of the following possesses semantic unity — a bluebell or a blue bell?

7.Give a brief account of the main characteristics of a word. What are the main structural types of English words? Arrange the following words into^a) simple; b) derived; c) compounds; d) derivational compounds.

Railway, breakdown, ill-mannered, everything, honey-mooner, old, biggish, narrow-minded, handy, o[en-hearted, toy, boyishness, sunrise, whatever, exception, lovable, appearance, timesaving, measurable, powers, responsible, famous, week-end, deaf-mute, effortless, humanity, successfully, inscribe, polished, light-blue.

8. What are the main problems of lexicology? What are the differences between studying words syntagmatically and paradigmatically?

9. What are the main ways of enriching the English vocabulary? 10.What are the principal productive ways of word-building in English? 11.What do we mean by derivation/affixation?

12.What is the difference between frequency and productivity of affixes? Why can’t one consider the noun-forming suffix -age, which is commonly employed in many words (cabbage, village, marriage, etc.), a productive one?

13.Write out from any five pages of the book you are reading examples which illustrate borrowed and native affixes in the corresponding tables. Comment on their productivity.

14.Explain the etymology and productivity of the affixes given below. Say what parts of speech can be formed with their help.

-ness, -ous, -ly, -y, -dom, -ish, -tion, -ed, -en, -ess, -or, -er, -hood, -less, -ate, — ing, -al, -ful, un-, re-, im (in)-, dis-, over-, ab-

15.Write out from the book you are reading all the words with the adjectiveforming suffix -ly and not less than 20 words with the homonymous adverbforming suffix. Say what these suffixes have in common and in what way they are differentiated.

16.What is meant by the term “morpheme”? Comment on the difference between a morphemic analysis and a derivational analysis. What are the criteria of the classification of morphemes? What is the difference between a morpheme, a morph, and an allomorph?

17.Describe all the stages of the morphemic analysis procedure. Comment on the essence of the morphemic analysis of the word. Analyze the following words into their ultimate constituents (UCs).

Suddenly, unconsciousness uplifted, ex-seaman, half-finished, unworthiness, blue-eyed, agreement, reinforcement, supernaturally.

18.Define the morphemic and derivational structures of the following words: impossible, pseudo-democratic, unemployment, antidisestablishmentarianism, untrue, re-examine, non-autobiographic, sunny, womanlike, classical.

19.In your reading (lyrics, movie-scripts, etc.) write out those prefixes which have the generic denotational meaning of a) negation; b) reversion; c) location and disposition; d) time and order.

20.Arrange the following words into three groups, those having: a) free stems; b) bound stems; c) semi-bound stems.

Tremendous, weekly, speechless, personal, annual, waiter, voyage, longish, terrorist, likely, freedom, manly, unselfish, experience, mistress, collectivization, gifted, power.

RECOMMENDED SOURCES/ REFERENCES

1.Антрушина Г.Б. Лексикология английского языка / Г.Б. Антрушина, О.В. Афанасьева, Н.Н. Морозова. – М.: Дрофа, 2007. – 287 с.

2.Гороть Є.І. Лексикологія сучасної англійської мови: Курс лекцій / Є.І. Гороть. – Луцьк: РВВ «Вежа» Волин. держ.ун-ту ім. Лесі Українки, 2007.

– 144 с.

3.Гороть Є.І. Notes on Modern English Lexicology / Нариси з лексикології сучасної англійської мови / Є.І. Гороть, С.В. Бєлова. – Луцьк: РВВ «Вежа» Волин. держ.ун-ту ім. Лесі Українки, 2008. – 372 с.

4.Кубрякова Е.С. Типы языковых значений: Семантика производного слова / Е.С. Кубрякова. – М.: Изд-во ЛКИ, 2008. – 208 с.

5.Манакин В.Н. Сопоставительная лексикология / В.Н. Манакин. – К.:

Знання, 2004. – 326 с.

6.Ніколенко А.Г. лексикологія англійської мови – теорія і практика / А.Г. Ніколенко. – Вінниця: Нова Книга, 2007. – 528 с.

7.Jackson H. Words and their meaning / H. Jackson. – NY: Longman, 2005. – 279 p.

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Introduction

What Is a Word? What Is Lexicology?

What’s in a name? that which we call a rose

By any other name would smell as sweet…

(W. Shakespeare. Romeo and Juliet, Act II, Sc. 2)

These famous lines reflect one of the fundamental problems of linguistic research: what is in a name, in a word? Is there any direct connection between a word and the object it represents? Could a rose have been called by «any other name» as Juliet says?

These and similar questions are answered by lexicological research. Lexicology, a branch of linguistics, is the study of words.

For some people studying words may seem uninteresting. But if studied properly, it may well prove just as exciting and novel as unearthing the mysteries of Outer Space.

It is significant that many scholars have attempted to define the word as a linguistic phenomenon. Yet none of the definitions can be considered totally satisfactory in all aspects. It is equally surprising that, despite all the achievements of modern science, certain essential aspects of the nature of the word still escape us. Nor do we fully understand the phenomenon called «language», of which the word is a fundamental unit.

We do not know much about the origin of language and, consequently, of the origin of words. It is true that there are several hypotheses, some of them no less fantastic than the theory of the divine origin of language. We know nothing — or almost nothing — about the mechanism by which a speaker’s mental process is converted into sound groups called «words», nor about the reverse process whereby a listener’s brain converts the acoustic phenomena into concepts and ideas, thus establishing a two-way process of communication.

We know very little about the nature of relations between the word and the referent (i. e. object, phenomenon, quality, action, etc. denoted by the word). If we assume that there is a direct relation between the word and the referent — which seems logical — it gives rise to another question: how should we explain the fact that the same referent is designated by quite different sound groups in different languages.

We do know by now — though with vague uncertainty — that there is nothing accidental about the vocabulary of the language;1 that each word is a small unit within a vast, efficient and perfectly balanced system. But we do not know why it possesses these qualities, nor do we know much about the processes by which it has acquired them.

The list of unknowns could be extended, but it is probably high time to look at the brighter side and register some of the things we do know about the nature of the word.

First, we do know that the word is a unit of speech which, as such, serves the purposes of human communication. Thus, the word can be defined as a unit of communication.

Secondly, the word can be perceived as the total of the sounds which comprise it.

Third, the word, viewed structurally, possesses several characteristics.

The modern approach to word studies is based on distinguishing between the external and the internal structures of the word.

By external structure of the word we mean its morphological structure. For example, in the word post-impressionists the following morphemes can be distinguished: the prefixes post-, im-, the root press, the noun-forming suffixes -ion, -ist, and the grammatical suffix of plurality -s. All these morphemes constitute the external structure of the word post-impressionists.

The external structure of words, and also typical word-formation patterns, are studied in the section on word-building (see Ch. 5, 6).

The internal structure of the word, or its meaning, is nowadays commonly referred to as the word’s semantic structure. This is certainly the word’s main aspect. Words can serve the purposes of human communication solely due to their meanings, and it is most unfortunate when this fact is ignored by some contemporary scholars who, in their obsession with the fetish of structure tend to condemn as irrelevant anything that eludes mathematical analysis. And this is exactly what meaning, with its subtle variations and shifts, is apt to do.

The area of lexicology specializing in the semantic studies of the word is called semantics (see Ch. 7, 8).

Another structural aspect of the word is its unity. The word possesses both external (or formal) unity and semantic unity. Formal unity of the word is sometimes inaccurately interpreted as indivisibility. The example of post-impressionists has already shown that the word is not, strictly speaking, indivisible. Yet, its component morphemes are permanently linked together in opposition to word-groups, both free and with fixed contexts, whose components possess a certain structural freedom, e. g. bright light, to take for granted (see Ch. 12).

The formal unity of the word can best be illustrated by comparing a word and a word-group comprising identical constituents. The difference between a blackbird and a black bird is best explained by their relationship with the grammatical system of the language. The word blackbird, which is characterized by unity, possesses a single grammatical framing: blackbird|s. The first constituent black is not subject to any grammatical changes. In the word-group a black bird each constituent can acquire grammatical forms of its own: the blackest birds I’ve ever seen. Other words can be inserted between the components which is impossible so far as the word is concerned as it would violate its unity: a black night bird.

The same example may be used to illustrate what we mean by semantic unity.

In the word-group a black bird each of the meaningful words conveys a separate concept: bird — a kind of living creature; black — a colour.

The word blackbird conveys only one concept: the type of bird. This is one of the main features of any word: it always conveys one concept, no matter how many component morphemes it may have in its external structure.

A further structural feature of the word is its susceptibility to grammatical employment. In speech most words can be used in different grammatical forms in which their interrelations are realized.

So far we have only underlined the word’s major peculiarities, but this suffices to convey the general idea of the difficulties and questions faced by the scholar attempting to give a detailed definition of the word. The difficulty does not merely consist in the considerable number of aspects that are to be taken into account, but, also, in the essential unanswered questions of word theory which concern the nature of its meaning (see Ch. 7).

All that we have said about the word can be summed up as follows.

The word is a speech unit used for the purposes of human communication, materially representing a group of sounds, possessing a meaning, susceptible to grammatical employment and characterized by formal and semantic unity.

The Main Lexicological Problems

Two of these have already been underlined. The problem of word-building is associated with prevailing morphological word-structures and with processes of making new words. Semantics is the study of meaning. Modern approaches to this problem are characterized by two different levels of study: syntagmatic and paradigmatic.

On the syntagmatic level, the semantic structure of the word is analysed in its linear relationships with neighbouring words in connected speech. In other words, the semantic characteristics of the word are observed, described and studied on the basis of its typical contexts.

On the paradigmatic level, the word is studied in its relationships with other words in the vocabulary system. So, a word may be studied in comparison with other words of similar meaning (e. g. work, n. — labour, п.; to refuse, v. — to reject v. — to decline, v.), of opposite meaning (e. g. busy, adj. — idle, adj.; to accept, v. — to reject, v.), of different stylistic characteristics (e. g. man, n. — chap, n. — bloke, n. — guy, a.). Consequently, the main problems of paradigmatic studies are synonymy (see Ch. 9, 10), antonymy (see Ch. 10), functional styles (see Ch. 1, 2).

Phraseology is the branch of lexicology specializing in word-groups which are characterized by stability of structure and transferred meaning, e. g. to take the bull by the horns, to see red, birds of a feather, etc. (see Ch.12,13).

One further important objective of lexicological studies is the study of the vocabulary of a language as a system. The vocabulary can be studied synchronically, that is, at a given stage of its development, or diachronically, that is, in the context of the processes through which it grew, developed and acquired its modern form (see Ch. 3, 4). The opposition of the two approaches accepted in modern linguistics is nevertheless disputable as the vocabulary, as well as the word which is its fundamental unit, is not only what it is now, at this particular stage of the language’s development, but, also, what it was centuries ago and has been throughout its history.

Exercise

Consider your answers to the following.

1. In what way can one analyse a word a) socially, b) linguistically?

2. What are the structural aspects of the word?

3. What is the external structure of the word irresistible? What is the internal structure of this word?

4. What is understood by formal unity of a word? Why is it not quite correct to say that a word is indivisible?

5. Explain why the word blackboard can be considered a unity and why the combination of words a black board doesn’t possess such a unity.

6. What is understood by the semantic unity of a word? Which of the following possesses semantic unity — a bluebell (R. колокольчик) or a blue bell (R. синий бубенчик).

7. Give a brief account of the main characteristics of a word.

8. What are the main problems of lexicology?

9. What are the main differences between studying words syntagmatically and paradigmatically?

Phraseology

Phraseology is the branch of lexicology specializing in word-groups which are characterized by stability of structure and transferred meaning, e.g. to take the bull by the horns, to see red, birds of a feather, etc.


  1. Vocabulary as a system

One further important objective of lexicological studies is the study of the vocabulary of a language as a system. The vocabulary can be studied synchronically, that is, at a given stage of its development, or diachronically, that is, in the context of the processes through which it grew, developed and acquired its modern form.

Answer these questions.


  1. In what way can one analyse a word a) socially, b) linguistically?

  2. What are the structural aspects of the word?

  3. What is the external structure of the word irresistible?(неопровержимый)? What is the internal structure of this word?

  4. What is understood by formal unity of a word?

  5. Explain why the word blackboard can be considered a unity and why the combination of words a black board doesn’t possess such a unity.

  6. What is understood by the semantic unity of a word? Which of the following possesses semantic unity – a bluebell (колокольчик) or a blue bell (синий бубенчик).

  7. Give a brief account of the main characteristics of a word.

  8. What are the main problems of lexicology?

  9. What are the main differences between studying words syntagmatically and paradigmatically?

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