- •Воронежский государственный архитектурно-строительный университет
- •Введение
- •Lecture 1 lexicology as a branch of linguistics
- •1. General characteristics of Lexicology
- •2. Branches of Lexicology
- •3. The connection of Lexicology with other branches of Linguistics
- •4. Synchronic and Diachronic Lexicology
- •Lecture 2 word structure and word meaning
- •1. Lexical units. The word as a fundamental unit of the language
- •2. Components of the word meaning
- •3. Word-Meaning and Motivation
- •4. Types of Meaning
- •Lecture 3 semantic structure of the word
- •1. Types of context
- •2. Word-meaning in syntagmatics and paradigmatics
- •3. Polysemy and ways of its development
- •4. Types of lexical meaning
- •5. Types of polysemy
- •6. Types of semantic changes
- •Lecture 4 semantic relations of words
- •1. Homonymy. Classifications of homonyms, their sources
- •2. Sources of homonymy
- •3. Synonyms. Classification of synonyms. Euphemisms
- •4. Antonyms. Their classification
- •Lecture 5 general characteristics of english vocabulary
- •1. The volume of the vocabulary
- •2. Archaisms
- •3. Neologisms
- •4. Professional terminology
- •5. Standard English. Slang
- •Lecture 6 word-groups and phraseological units
- •1. Types of word combinations. Classifications of word-groups
- •2. Free word groups
- •3. Phraseology as a subsystem of language
- •4. A phraseological unit
- •5. Distinction between free word-groups and phraseological units
- •6. Classification of phraseological units
- •7. Sources of phraseological units
- •Lecture 7 word structure and word-formation
- •1. Morphological structure of the English word
- •2. Word-formation
- •3. Affixation. Prefixation
- •4. Suffixation. Classifications of suffixes
- •5. Conversion
- •6. Other types of word-formation
- •Lecture 8
- •Variants of the english language
- •1. British English and American English as the main variants of the English language
- •2. Morphological peculiarities of American words
- •3. Grammar peculiarities of American words
- •4. Lexical peculiarities of the two variants
- •5. The future of the English language
- •Lecture 9 english lexicography
- •1. Lexicography as a branch of linguistics, its aims and significance
- •2. The history of dictionary making
- •4. Classification of dictionaries
- •4. Main types of linguistic dictionaries of the English language
- •Modern Russian-English English-Russian Dictionaries
- •Modern English and American Dictionaries
- •Вопросы к зачету по курсу «Лексикология английского языка»
- •Final test English Lexicology
- •Заключение
- •Список литературы
- •Table of contents
- •394006 Воронеж, ул.20-летия Октября, 84
Lecture 7 word structure and word-formation
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Morphological structure of the English word.
Word-formation.
Affixation. Prefixation.
Suffixation. Classifications of suffixes
Conversion.
Other types of word-formation.
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1. Morphological structure of the English word
The word is the fundamental unit of language, it has form and content. Linguists define the word as the smallest free form found in language. Words have an internal structure consisting of smaller units. The most important component of word structure is the morpheme (Greek morphe “form” +
-eme “the smallest distinctive unit”) – the smallest unit of language that carries information about meaning or function. For instance, the word builder consists of two morphemes (build – with the meaning of “construct”) and -er (indicates that the entire word functions as a noun with the meaning “one who builds”); the word houses is made up of two morphemes (the morpheme house – with the meaning of “dwelling” and the morpheme –s – with the meaning “more than one”). Some words consist of a single morpheme (e.g. the word train cannot be divided into smaller parts. Such words are called simple words and words which contain two or more morphemes are complex words. For example, one: and, boy, hunt, act; two: boy-s, hunt-er, act-ive; three: hunt-er-s, act-iv-ate; more than three: re-act-iv-ate.
A morpheme is a meaning and a stretch of sound joined together. Morphemes are always used as parts of words.
Thus, morpheme is a minimum sign of a given meaning with a given form (sound and graphic).
A morpheme that can be a word by itself is called a free morpheme whereas a morpheme that must be attached to another element is a bound morpheme, e.g. the morpheme boy is free, since it can be used as a word on its own; plural –s is bound. A free morpheme coincides with the stem and a bound morpheme occurs only as a constituent part of a word. Affixes are bound morphemes, for they always make part of a word.
The morphological structure of words can consist of several components (morphemes). Words can be divided into two or more parts: a core is called a root (the morpheme that expresses the lexical meaning of the word, e.g. teach – teacher – teaching). The parts added to the root are called affixes (morphemes that modify the meaning of the root). An affix added before the root is called a prefix (reread, ex-minister); an affix added after the root is called a suffix (actor, washable, kingdom). Roots belong to a lexical category, such as noun, verb, adjective, or prepositions.
One should distinguish between suffixes and inflexions in English. Suffixes can form a new part of speech, e.g. beauty – beautiful. Inflexions are morphemes used to change grammar forms of the word, e.g. work – works worked – working.
2. Word-formation
Word formation or word-building is a branch of science of the language which studies the patterns on which language forms new lexical items (expressions, words). It is a process of forming words by combining a root and affixal morphemes.
There are the following ways of word-formation in English: affixation, conversion, compounding, clipping, back-formation, blending, sound imitation, sound-interchange, stress-interchange.
Depending on the morphemes used in the word there are four structural types of words in English:
1) simple (root) words consist of one root morpheme (warm, law, tables, tenth);
2) derived words consist of one root morpheme, one or several affixes and an inflexion (lawful, unmanageable);
3) compound words consist of two or more root morphemes and an inflexion (boyfriend, outlaw);
4) compound-derived words consist of two or more root morphemes, one or more affixes and an inflexion (left-handed, warm-hearted, blue-eyed).