Language is embiggened by words that don’t exist: the case of a circumfix

The paper deals with parasynthetic formations combining the prefix en- and the suffix -en, which are sometimes regarded as an example of a circumfix in English. The aim is to find more instances of this pattern than the usual three or four mentioned in the literature (enlighten, embolden, enliven,...

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Main Author: Aleš Klégr
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Univerzita Karlova, Filozofická fakulta 2018-08-01
Series:Linguistica Pragensia
Subjects:
Online Access:https://linguisticapragensia.ff.cuni.cz/wp-content/uploads/sites/12/2018/07/Ales_Klegr_53-70.pdf
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spelling doaj-2eedcb034e4141209d0c032d0b8af4a42020-11-25T02:11:09ZdeuUniverzita Karlova, Filozofická fakultaLinguistica Pragensia0862-84321805-96352018-08-012815370Language is embiggened by words that don’t exist: the case of a circumfix Aleš Klégr0Department of English Language and ELT Methodology, Faculty of Arts, Charles UniversityThe paper deals with parasynthetic formations combining the prefix en- and the suffix -en, which are sometimes regarded as an example of a circumfix in English. The aim is to find more instances of this pattern than the usual three or four mentioned in the literature (enlighten, embolden, enliven, and embiggen). After searching three corpora of several billion words without much success, an experiment was made to search the Web for hypothetical verb tokens constructed from monosyllabic adjectives on the pattern provided by the four initial verbs. The search confirmed that more than a hundred such verbs occur on the Web. The discovery of so many en-Adj-en verbs unacknowledged in standard reference books is attributed to the effect of big data on the Web; it is assumed that the en-Adj-en pattern is the type of process whose function is primarily pragmatic, occasion-specific and discourse-oriented, rather than lexical (i.e. concept labelling). As a result, although the pattern is available for active use, these formations, after having served their purpose, rarely get beyond the nonce-word stage, let alone enter the lexicon.https://linguisticapragensia.ff.cuni.cz/wp-content/uploads/sites/12/2018/07/Ales_Klegr_53-70.pdfparasynthesiscircumfixen-Adj-en patternconjectural formsWeb search experiment
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Aleš Klégr
spellingShingle Aleš Klégr
Language is embiggened by words that don’t exist: the case of a circumfix
Linguistica Pragensia
parasynthesis
circumfix
en-Adj-en pattern
conjectural forms
Web search experiment
author_facet Aleš Klégr
author_sort Aleš Klégr
title Language is embiggened by words that don’t exist: the case of a circumfix
title_short Language is embiggened by words that don’t exist: the case of a circumfix
title_full Language is embiggened by words that don’t exist: the case of a circumfix
title_fullStr Language is embiggened by words that don’t exist: the case of a circumfix
title_full_unstemmed Language is embiggened by words that don’t exist: the case of a circumfix
title_sort language is embiggened by words that don’t exist: the case of a circumfix
publisher Univerzita Karlova, Filozofická fakulta
series Linguistica Pragensia
issn 0862-8432
1805-9635
publishDate 2018-08-01
description The paper deals with parasynthetic formations combining the prefix en- and the suffix -en, which are sometimes regarded as an example of a circumfix in English. The aim is to find more instances of this pattern than the usual three or four mentioned in the literature (enlighten, embolden, enliven, and embiggen). After searching three corpora of several billion words without much success, an experiment was made to search the Web for hypothetical verb tokens constructed from monosyllabic adjectives on the pattern provided by the four initial verbs. The search confirmed that more than a hundred such verbs occur on the Web. The discovery of so many en-Adj-en verbs unacknowledged in standard reference books is attributed to the effect of big data on the Web; it is assumed that the en-Adj-en pattern is the type of process whose function is primarily pragmatic, occasion-specific and discourse-oriented, rather than lexical (i.e. concept labelling). As a result, although the pattern is available for active use, these formations, after having served their purpose, rarely get beyond the nonce-word stage, let alone enter the lexicon.
topic parasynthesis
circumfix
en-Adj-en pattern
conjectural forms
Web search experiment
url https://linguisticapragensia.ff.cuni.cz/wp-content/uploads/sites/12/2018/07/Ales_Klegr_53-70.pdf
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