Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Notational conventions
- Tree diagrams
- Preface
- 1 Preliminaries
- 2 Syntactic overview
- 3 The verb
- 4 The clause: complements
- 5 Nouns and noun phrases
- 6 Adjectives and adverbs
- 7 Prepositions and preposition phrases
- 8 The clause: adjuncts
- 9 Negation
- 10 Clause type and illocutionary force
- 11 Content clauses and reported speech
- 12 Relative constructions and unbounded dependencies
- 13 Comparative constructions
- 14 Non-finite and verbless clauses
- 15 Coordination and supplementation
- 16 Information packaging
- 17 Deixis and anaphora
- 18 Inflectional morphology and related matters
- 19 Lexical word-formation
- 20 Punctuation
- Further reading
- Index
- Lexical index
- Conceptual index
19 - Lexical word-formation
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 May 2017
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Notational conventions
- Tree diagrams
- Preface
- 1 Preliminaries
- 2 Syntactic overview
- 3 The verb
- 4 The clause: complements
- 5 Nouns and noun phrases
- 6 Adjectives and adverbs
- 7 Prepositions and preposition phrases
- 8 The clause: adjuncts
- 9 Negation
- 10 Clause type and illocutionary force
- 11 Content clauses and reported speech
- 12 Relative constructions and unbounded dependencies
- 13 Comparative constructions
- 14 Non-finite and verbless clauses
- 15 Coordination and supplementation
- 16 Information packaging
- 17 Deixis and anaphora
- 18 Inflectional morphology and related matters
- 19 Lexical word-formation
- 20 Punctuation
- Further reading
- Index
- Lexical index
- Conceptual index
Summary
This is the second of two chapters dealing with the form of words. The main topic of Ch. 18 was the formation of inflected words from their lexical base, while the present chapter is concerned with the form of lexical bases, i.e. with the lexical side of word-formation.
Preliminaries
Established words and potential words
To a very large extent speakers know words as individual items of vocabulary. We know, for example, that the word for the area over which a bishop has charge is bishopric, not *bishopdom – and conversely that the word denoting the area over which a king rules is kingdom, not *kingric; that there are words unfaithfulness and infidelity, but not *infaithfulity or *unfidelness; and so on. Words like bishopric, kingdom, unfaithfulness, infidelity we will refer to as established words: they are recognised as part of the vocabulary of the language.
Established words are individually familiar to speakers of the language and can be found in standard dictionaries. The inventory of items included in such dictionaries is not, however, identical to the set of words. A dictionary includes many multi-word expressions that have idiomatic meanings or are otherwise known as individual items (give in, take advantage of, the more the merrier, and so on). Conversely, and more importantly for the purposes of this chapter, not all words are established words. In speaking or writing we do not always restrict ourselves to established words: we can create new words or use words we have heard before but which have not yet become established.
Creating new words is in general subject to rules or constraints. For example, the rules of Present-day English word-formation allow policeability as a word, but not *priestric or *pick-basket. People vary in their subjective reaction to new words, and some will find policeability inelegant or otherwise open to criticism, but it nevertheless differs very clearly in its linguistic status from *priestric and *pick-basket. Policeability is formed from the established verb police by adding the adjective-forming suffix ·able, and then adding a further suffix, with modification of ·able, to yield a noun that might be used in such a sentence as The Commissioner questioned the policeability of the new regulations.
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- Information
- The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language , pp. 1621 - 1722Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2002
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