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Word Formation In English

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Word Formation In English
Word-formation in English by Ingo Plag
Universität Siegen

in press

Cambridge University Press
Series ‘Cambridge Textbooks in Linguistics’

Draft version of September 27, 2002

i

TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction .......................................................................................................... 1

1. Basic concepts
1.1. What is a word?

4
4

1.2. Studying word-formation

12

1.3. Inflection and derivation

18

1.4. Summary

23

Further reading

23

Exercises

24

2. Studying complex words
2.1. Identifying morphemes
2.1.1. The morpheme as the minimal linguistic sign

25
25
25

2.1.2. Problems with the morpheme: the mapping of form and meaning
2.2. Allomorphy

33

2.3. Establishing word-formation rules

38

2.4. Multiple affixation

50

2.5. Summary

53

Further reading

54

Exercises

55

3. Productivity and the mental lexicon

1

27

551

3.1. Introduction: What is productivity?

551

3.2. Possible and actual words

561

3.3. Complex words in the lexicon

59

3.4. Measuring productivity

64

Pages 55-57 appear twice due to software-induced layout-alterations that occur when the word for

windows files are converted into PDF.

ii
3.5. Constraining productivity

73

3.5.1. Pragmatic restrictions

74

3.5.2. Structural restrictions

75

3.5.3. Blocking

79

3.6. Summary

84

Further reading

85

Exercises

85

4. Affixation

90

4.1. What is an affix?

90

4.2. How to investigate affixes: More on methodology

93

4.3. General properties of English affixation

98

4.4. Suffixes

109

4.4.1. Nominal suffixes

109

4.4.2. Verbal suffixes

116

4.4.3. Adjectival suffixes

118

4.4.4. Adverbial suffixes

123

4.5. Prefixes

123

4.6. Infixation

127

4.7. Summary

130

Further reading

131

Exercises

131

5. Derivation without affixation
5.1. Conversion

134
134

5.1.1. The directionality of conversion

135

5.1.2. Conversion or zero-affixation?

140

5.1.3. Conversion: Syntactic or morphological?

143

5.2. Prosodic morphology

145

5.2.1.

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