Borrowed Lexicon and Neologisms in Standard Language and Sociolects (the Case of Slovenian) (original) (raw)
Related papers
2015. Categories of word-formation.
(2015) Categories of word-formation. In: Peter O. Müller et al. (eds.) Word-Formation: An International Handbook of the Languages of Europe Bd. 2 (= HSK 40/2): 1020–1034., 2015
Categories such as agent noun, place noun, or gender marking, are the oldest, most common and most widely used semantic categories in word-formation, providing a suitable onomasiological basis for crosslinguistic comparison. Among the proposals to group such categories into more general semantic sets, the most well-known – especially in Slavic linguistics – is the one proposed by the Czech linguist Miloš Dokulil, who distinguished transposition, mutation and modification. In the present article, a more refined classification will be proposed.
Zeitschrift für Wortbildung / Journal of Word Formation" (ZWJW) ist eine internationale Open-Access-Zeitschrift mit einem Double-blind-Begutachtungsverfahren. Das Spektrum der Zeitschrift umfasst Wortbildungsphänomene in allen Sprachen und in allen linguistischen Bereichen, z.B. Morphologie, Syntax, Lexikologie, Phonologie, Semantik, Pragmatik, Sprachgeschichte, Typologie, Dialektologie, Spracherwerb und Sprachkontakt. Die Zeitschrift erscheint online mit zwei Ausgaben pro Jahr. Sie enthält Artikel, Rezensionen und allgemeine Informationen wie z.B. Tagungsankündigungen. Sonderhefte zu wichtigen Themen der Wortbildung werden in unregelmäßigen Abständen erscheinen. Manuskripte können in Deutsch, Englisch, Französisch und Spanisch eingereicht werden. Manuskripte sind an die federführende Herausgeberin unter petra.vogel@uni-siegen. de zu senden. Redaktion: Dr.
The scope of word-formation research
Schmid, Hans-Jörg, "The scope of word-formation research". In: P.O. Müller, I. Ohnheiser, S. Olsen and F. Rainer, eds., Word-Formation. An International Handbook of the Languages of Europe. Vol. I. Berlin - Boston: De Gruyter Mouton, 1-21. , 2015
The first article of a handbook, this paper presents an introductory survey of the scope of word-formation research. It defines and demarcates the subject-matter of word-formation and explains the basic notions related to the internal structures of complex lexemes and the cross-linguistically important word-formation patterns. Major approaches, analytical and descriptive levels and models in the field of word-formation research are outlined from a bird’s eye view. The final section deals with productivity and lexicalization.
2019
Conference Abstract: The main aims of the conference are to present advances in the interdisciplinary research into word formation (derivation and compounding) in intra-and interinguistic contexts, to analyze relevant problems in the field of tension between intrinsic language change and language interference and to address the need of using the combined methods of synchronic, historical and computational linguistics as well as the united competence of leading European specialists in these specific linguistic disciplines in order to improve the conceptual and methodological apparatus necessary for working in the fields of descriptive, comparative and historical morphology, lexicology, and syntax. To meet each aspect of this interdisciplinary target, the conference aims, on the one hand, at giving space to various theoretical and practical issues regarding word-formation in the course of the language development within and between several groups of Indo-European (Indic, Iranian, Greek, Italic, Anatolian, Germanic) and Semitic languages (Akkadian); on the other hand, it will provide an impetus to research into word-formation in contexts of multilingualism (within Indo-European, within Semitic, but also between Indo-European and Semitic languages, e.g. in Anatolian and Near-Eastern contexts) through the joint input of morphologists and scholars of historical (socio-)linguistics working from comparative and contrastive perspective.
The Construction of Words: Introduction and Overview
The Construction of Words, 2018
In Construction Morphology, morphological patterns are expressed by constructional schemas that motivate properties of existing complex words, and state how new complex words can be formed. This article briefly summarizes a number of theoretical assumptions of Construction Morphology, and how they play a role in the various contributions to this volume on advances in Construction Morphology. Key features of this theory are that morphology is word-based, that morphological patterns are interpreted as constructions (form-meaning pairs), and that there is no strict separation of grammar and lexicon. Paradigmatic relationships play an essential role in structuring lexical and grammatical knowledge. These ideas can be applied fruitfully to the study of sign language, visual language, language change, language acquisition, and language processing.
processes on formal grounds. Bauer (1983) classifies the word-formation in English as follows: 1. Compounding 2. Prefixation 3. Suffixation 4. Conversion 5. Backformation 6. Clipping 7. Formation of blends 8. Formation of acronyms 9. Word manufacturing Tamil makes use of compounding and suffixation extensively for the formation of words. Though the present paper attempts to give the types of word formation in Tamil (Rajendran, 1993) based on typology, explanations will be given by raising certain problematic issues.