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1. Lexicology as a branch of linguistics, its aims and significance. Links with other branches of linguistics. Synchronic vs diachronic approaches to the language study.

Lexicology – ‘the science of the word’

Lexicon (syn. vocabulary, word-stock, lexis; Ukr.словниковий склад мови) is the total number of words that make up a language.

Studies of Lexicon

lexicon formation

lexicon stratification

lexicon organisation (studied by Lexicography)

Studies of Word-Groups

proper names (studied by Onomastics)

terms (studied by Terminology)

phraseological units (studied by Phraseology)

Studies relevant to words, word-groups, and lexicon

-functions of lexical units in speech (studied by Functional Lexicology)

-the meaning of lexical units (studied by Lexical Semantics)

Theoretical and Practical Value

-a systematic description of Modern English lexicon;

-a thorough study of the relations existing between various lexical layers of the English vocabulary;

-an in depth analysis of the specific laws and regulations that govern word-stock development at the present time;

-a comprehensive survey of the sources of the lexicon growth and the changes it has undergone;

-an introduction to the theory and practice of compiling dictionaries.

Approaches to the Study of Language

synchronic (Gr. syn — ‘together, with’, chronos — ‘time’) or descriptive

diachronic (Gr. dia — ‘through’, chronos — ‘time) or historical

to beg – a beggar

a beggar > to beg

2. Words of native origin and their distinctive features.

the native stock of words (25-30%) – words known from the earliest available manuscripts of the Old English period; they were brought to the British Isles from the continent in the 5th century AD by the Germanic tribes of the Angles, the Saxons and the Jutes.

high frequency value 80% of the 500 most frequent words;

monosyllabic structure: eye, red, head, sun, door, help etc;

a wide range of lexical and grammatical valency: to raise / bend / bow / shake / bury one’s head; clear / cool / level head; above one’s head; in one’s head etc.

developed polysemy: head, n. 1) the part of the body; 2) the mind or brain; 3) ability; 4) a leader; 5) side of the coin etc.

great word-building power: headed, heading, headache, header, headline, to behead etc;

enter a number of set expressions: heads or tails; head over heels, to keep one’s head above water, from head to toe etc.

Words of Indo-European stock have cognates in the vocabularies of different Indo-European languages:

-terms of kinship: mother, father, son, brother, daughter etc.;

-parts of the human body: foot, nose, eye, heart etc.;

-names of animals and birds: bull, swine, goose, fish, wolf, cat etc;

-names of plants: tree, birch, corn etc.;

-names of celestial bodies: sun, star, moon etc.;

-calendar terms: day, year, month etc.;

-names of domestic objects: home, house, door, stool, floor etc.;

-common verbs: be, go, do, have, see, sit, think, help, love, kiss, drink, bear, eat, ask etc.;

-common adjectives: hard, slow, wide, long, dark, red, white etc.;

-numerals: 1 .. 100;

-pronouns: I, my, that etc.

The evolution of I

O.E. ic (1st p. Sg. Nom.) < Pr.G. *ekan (cf. O.Fris. ik, O.N. ek, Norw. eg, Dan. jeg, O.H.G. ih, Ger. ich, Goth. ik) < PIE *ego(m) (cf. Skt. aham, Hitt. uk, L. ego, Gk. ego, Rus. ja);

the dot on the ‘small’ letter -i- began to appear in the 11th c. Latin manuscripts, to distinguish the letter from the stroke of another letter (such as -m- or -n-);

ic was reduced to i by 1137;

I became capitalised since 1250.

Words of Common Germanic stock have cognates only in other Germanic languages, e.g. Norwegian, Dutch, Icelandic, etc. Their areal distribution reflects the contacts between the Germanic tribes at the beginning of their migration:

-common nouns: hand, sand, earth, sheep, fox, bath, child, winter, rain, ice, house, life, bridge, rest etc.;

-common verbs: make, starve, sing, come, send, learn, can, buy, drive, burn, bake, keep, meet etc.;

-common adjectives: green, brown, cold, dead, deaf, deep, damp, thick, high, old, small etc.;

-adverbs: behind, much, still, well, yet etc.;

-Words of proper English stock do not occur in other Germanic or non-Germanic languages:

-words whose roots have not been found outside English, e.g. bird;

-compounds and derived words formed from the Germanic roots in England, e.g.

woman (O.E. wifman) < wife + man;

lord (O.E. hlāford) < loaf + weard (‘keeper’);

lady (O.E. hlāfdiʒe) < loaf + knead (‘bread-kneading’);

sheriff (O.E. scirʒerefa ‘chief of the shire’).

pronouns: we, he, you, it, self etc.

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