Front cover image for English word-formation

English word-formation

Interest in word-formation is probably as old as interest in language itself. As Dr. Bauer points out in his Introduction, many of the questions that scholars are asking now were also being asked in the seventeenth, eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. However, there is still little agreement on methodology in the study of word-formation or theoretical approaches to it; even the kind of data relevant to its study is open to debate. Dr. Bauer here provides students and general linguists alike with a new perspective on what is a confused and often controversial field of study, providing a resolution to the terminological confusion which currently reigns in this area. In doing so, he clearly demonstrates the challenge and intrinsic fascination of the study of word-formation. Linguists have recently become increasingly aware of the relevance of word-formation to work in syntax and semantics, phonology and morphology, and Dr Bauer discusses - within a largely synchronic and transformational framework - the theoretical issues involved. He considers topics where word-formation has a contribution to make to other areas of linguistics and, without pretending to provide a fully-fledged theory of word-formation, develops those points which he sees as being central to its study. -- Publisher description
Print Book, English, 1983
Cambridge University Press, Cambridge [Cambridgeshire], 1983
xiii, 311 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
9780521241670, 9780521284929, 0521241677, 0521284929
8728300
Introduction
Some basic concepts
Lexicalization
Productivity
Phonological issues in word-formation
Syntactic and semantic issues in word-formation
An outline of English word-formation
Theory and practice
Conclusion
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