Тема 1. Types of
language Units
1. Lexicology
2. Language Units.
3. Structural Types of words.
4. Word combination
1.
Lexicology
The term lexicology is of Greek origin (from lexis –
word and logos -
science). Lexicology is the part of linguistics which deals
with the vocabulary and
characteristic features of words and word-groups.
The term
word denotes the main lexical unit of a language resulting from the
association of a group of sounds with a meaning. This
unit is used in grammatical
functions characteristic of it. It is the smallest
unit of a language which can stand
alone as a complete utterance.
The term
word-group denotes a group of words which exists in the language
as a ready-made unit, has the unity of meaning, the
unity of syntactical function,
e.g. the word-group as loose as a goose means clumsy (неуклюжий) and is used in a sentence as a predicative (именная часть составного сказуемого) (He is as loose as a goose).
Lexicology
can be general and special. General lexicology is the lexicology
of any language, part of General Linguistics. It is
aimed at establishing language
universals – linguistic phenomena and properties
common to all languages.
Special
lexicology is the lexicology of a particular language (English,
German, Russian, etc.).
Lexicology can study the development of the vocabulary, the origin of
words and word-groups, their semantic relations and
the development of their
sound form and meaning. In this case it is called
historical lexicology.
Another
branch of lexicology is called descriptive and studies the
vocabulary at a definite stage of its development.
Lexicology and its Connection
with Other Linguistc Disciplines
Lexicology is closely connected with other branches of
linguistcs:
1. It is connected with Phonetics because the word‘s
sound form is a fixed
sequence of phonemes united by a lexical stress.
2. Lexicology is connected with Morphology and
Word-Formation as the
word‘s structure is a fixed sequence of morphemes.
3. It is connected with Morphology because the word‘s
content plane is a
unity of lexical and grammatical meanings.
4. The word functions as part of the sentence and
performs a certain
syntactical function that is why it is also connected
with Syntax.
5. The word functions in different situations and
spheres of life therefore it
is connected with Stylistics, Socio- and
Psycholinguistics.
But
there is also a great difference between lexicology and other linguistc
disciplines. Grammatical and phonological systems are
relatively stable. Therefore
they are mostly studied within the framework of
intralinguistics.
Lexical system is never stable. It is directly
connected with extralinguistic
systems. It is constantly growing and decaying (распадаться). It is immediately reacts to changes in social
life, e.g. the intense development of science and technology in the 20th
century gave birth to such words as computer, sputnik, spaceship. Therefore
lexicology is a sociolinguistic discipline. It studies each particular word,
both its intra- and extralingiustic relations.
Lexicology is subdivided into a number of autonomous
but interdependent
disciplines:
1. Lexicological Phonetics. It studies the expression
plane of lexical units in
isolation and in the flow of speech.
2. Semasiology. It deals with the meaning of words and
other linguistic
units: morphemes, word-formation types, morphological
word classes and
morphological categories.
3. Onomasiology or Nomination Theory. It deals with
the process of
nomination: what name this or that object has and why.
4. Etymology. It studies the origin, the original
meaning and form of words.
5. Praseology. It deals with phraseological units.
6. Lexicography. It is a practical science. It
describes the vocabulary and
each lexical unit in the form of dictionaries.
7. Lexical Morphology. It deals with the morphological
structure of the word.
8. Word-formation. It deals with the patterns which
are used in coining new
words.
Modern
English lexicology investigates the problems of word structure and word
formation; it also investigates the word structure of English, the classification
of vocabulary units; the relations between different lexical layers4 of the
English vocabulary and some other. Lexicology came into being to meet the
demands of different branches of applied linguistic!
2.
Language units
The main unit of the lexical system of a language
resulting from the association of a group of sounds with a meaning is a word. This unit is used in
grammatical functions characteristic of it. It is the smallest language unit
which can stand alone as a complete utterance.
The modern approach to word studies is based on
distinguishing between the
external and the internal structures of the word.
By
external structure of the word we mean its morphological structure. For
example, in the word post-impressionists the following
morphemes can be
distinguished: the prefixes post-, im-, the root
press, the noun-forming suffixes –
ion, -ist, and the grammatical suffix of plurality –s.
The
external structure of the word, and also typical word-formation patterns,
are studied in the framework of word-building.
The
internal structure of the word, or its meaning, is nowadays commonly
referred to as the word‘s semantic structure. This is
the word‘s main aspect.
The
area of lexicology specialising in the semantic studies of the word is
called semantics.
One of
the main structural features of the word that it possesses both
external (formal) unity and semantic unity.
A
further structural feature of the word is its susceptibility- восприимчивость) to grammatical employment. In speech most
words can be used in different grammatical forms in which their interrelations
are realized.
A word can be
divided into smaller sense units - morphemes. The morpheme is the smallest
meaningful language unit. The morpheme consists of a class of variants,
allomorphs, which are either phonologically or morphologically conditioned,
e.g. please, pleasant, pleasure.
Morphemes are divided into two large groups: lexical morphemes and grammatical
(functional) morphemes. Both lexical and grammatical morphemes can be free and
bound. Free lexical morphemes are roots of words which express the lexical
meaning of the word, they coincide with the stem of simple words. Free
grammatical morphemes are function words: articles, conjunctions and
prepositions ( the, with, and).
Bound lexical morphemes are affixes: prefixes (dis-), suffixes (-ish) and also
blocked (unique) root morphemes (e.g. Fri-day, cran-berry). Bound grammatical
morphemes are inflexions (endings), e.g. -s for the Plural of nouns, -ed for
the Past Indefinite of regular verbs, -ing for the Present Participle, -er for
the Comparative degree of adjectives.
In the second half of the twentieth century the English word building system
was enriched by creating so called splinters which scientists include in the
affixation stock of the Modern English wordbuilding system. Splinters are the
result of clipping the end or the beginning of a word and producing a number of
new words on the analogy with the primary word-group. For example, there are
many words formed with the help of the splinter mini- (apocopе (апокопа, отпадение последнего слога или звука в слове) produced by clipping the word «miniature»), such as
«miniplane», «minijet», «minicycle», «minicar», «miniradio» and many others.
All of these words denote objects of smaller than normal dimensions.
On the analogy with «mini-» there
appeared the splinter «maxi»- (apocopе produced
by clipping the word «maximum»), such words as «maxi-series», «maxi-sculpture»,
«maxi-taxi» and many others appeared in the language.
There are also splinters which are
formed by means of apheresis, that is clipping the beginning of a word.
In the seventieths of the twentieth century there was
a political scandal in the hotel «Watergate» where the Democratic Party of the
USA had its pre-election headquarters. Republicans managed to install bugs
there and when they were discovered there was a scandal and the ruling American
government had to resign. The name «Watergate» acquired the meaning «a
political scandal», «corruption». On the analogy with this word quite a number
of other words were formed by using the splinter «gate» (apheresis of the word
«Watergate»), such as: «Irangate», »Westlandgate», »shuttlegate», »milliongate»
etc. The splinter «gate» is added mainly to Proper names: names of people with
whom the scandal is connected or a geographical name denoting the place where
the scandal occurred.
The splinter «mobile» was formed by clipping the beginning of the word
«automobile» and is used to denote special types of automobiles, such as:
«artmobile», «bookmobile», «snowmobile», «tourmobile» etc.
3. According to
the nature and the number of morphemes constituting a word there are different
structural types of words in English: simple, derived, compound,
compound-derived.
Simple words consist of one root morpheme and an inflexion (in many cases the
inflexion is zero), e.g. «seldom», «chairs», «longer», «asked».
Derived words consist of one root morpheme, one or several affixes and an
infection, e.g. «deristricted (снимать ограничения)», «unemployed».
Compound words consist of two or more root morphemes and an inflexion, e.g.
«baby-moons»(искусств.спутник земли), «wait-and-see (policy) выжидательная политика».
Compound-derived words consist of two or more root morphemes, one or more
affixes and an inflexion, e.g. «middle-of-the-roaders» человек занимающий половинчатую позицию, «job-hopper»летун, человек часто меняющий работу.
When speaking about the structure of words stems also
should be mentioned. The stem is the part of the word which remains unchanged
throughout the paradigm of the word, e.g. the stem «hop» can be found in the
words: «hop», «hops», «hopped», «hopping». The stem «hippie» can be found in
the words: «hippie», «hippies», «hippie’s», «hippies’». The stem «job-hop» can
be found in the words : «job-hop», «job-hops», «job-hopped», «job-hopping».
So stems, the same as words, can be simple, derived, compound and
compound-derived. Stems have not only the lexical meaning but also grammatical
(part-of-speech) meaning, they can be noun stems («girl» in the adjective
«girlish»), adjective stems («girlish» in the noun «girlishness»), verb stems
(«expell» in the noun «expellee») etc. They differ from words by the absence of
inflexions in their structure, they can be used only in the structure of words.
Sometimes it is rather difficult to distinguish between simple and derived
words, especially in the cases of phonetic borrowings from other languages and
of native words with blocked (unique) root morphemes, e.g. «perestroika»,
«cranberry», «absence» etc.
In the English language of the second half of the twentieth century there
developed so called block compounds, that is compound words which have a
uniting stress but a split spelling, such as «chat show», «pinguin suit» etc.
Such compound words can be easily mixed up with word-groups of the type «stone
wall», so called nominative binomials два названия. Such linguistic units serve to denote a notion which
is more specific than the notion expressed by the second component and consists
of two nouns, the first of which is an attribute to the second one. If we
compare a nominative binomial with a compound noun with the structure N+N we
shall see that a nominative binomial has no unity of stress. The change of the
order of its components will change its lexical meaning, e.g. «vid kid» is «a
kid who is a video fan» while «kid vid» means «a video-film for kids» or else
«lamp oil» means «oil for lamps» and «oil lamp» means «a lamp which uses oil
for burning».
Thus, we can draw the conclusion that in Modern English the following language
units can be mentioned: morphemes, splinters, words, nominative binomials,
non-idiomatic and idiomatic word-combinations, sentences.
4. Word-Combination
What is a Word-Combination?
The word-combination (WC) is the largest two-facet
lexical unit observed
on the syntagmatic level of analysis. By the degree of
their structural and semantic
cohesion(kouhizhn связь)
Lexical combinability (collocation) is the aptness of a word to appear
in
certain lexical contexts, e.g. the word question
combines with certain adjectives:
delicate, vital, important.
Each
word has a certain norm of collocation. Any departure from this norm
is felt as a stylistic device: to shove a question.
The collocations
of correlated words in different languages are not identical,
e.g. both the English flower and its Russian
counterpart цветок
can be combined
with a number of words denoting the place where the
flowers are grown: garden-
flowers, hot-house flowers; садовые цветы, оранжерейные цветы. But the
English word cannot enter into combination with the
word room to denote flowers
growing in the rooms, cf.: комнатные цветы – pot flowers.
Grammatical combinability (colligation) is the aptness of a word to
appear
in certain grammatical contexts, e.g. the adjective
heavy can be followed by a noun
(heavy storm), by an infinitive (heavy to lift). Each
grammatical unit has a certain
norm of colligation: nouns combine with pre-positional
adjectives (a new dress),
relative adjectives combine with pre-positional
adverbs of degree (dreadfully
tired).
The
departure from the norm of colligation is usually impossible:
mathematics at clever is a meaningless string of words
because English nouns do
not allow of the structure N + at + A.
Categories of
Word-Combinations
The study of
WCs is based on the following set of oppositions each
constituting a separate category:
1. Neutral
and stylistically marked WCs: old coat – old boy;
2.
Variable and stable WCs: take a pen – take place;
3.
Non-idiomatic and idiomatic WCs: to speak plainly – to call a spade a
spade;
4.
Usual and occasional WCs: blue sky – angry sky;
5.
Conceptually determined and conceptually non-determined WCs: clean
dress – clean dirt;
6.
Sociolinguistically determined and sociolinguistically non-determined
WCs:
cold war – cold soup.
II. Meaning of Word-Combinations
Meaning of
WCs is anlysed into lexical and grammatical (structural
components).
Lexical meaning of the WC is the combined lexical
meanings of its component
words: red flower – red + flower. But in most cases
the meaning of the whole
combination predominates over the lexical meaning of
its constituents, e.g. the
meaning of the monosemantic adjective atomic is
different in atomic weight and
atomic bomb.
Polysemantic words are used in WCs in one of their meanings: blind man
(horse, cat) – blind type (print, handwriting). Only
one meaning of the adjective
blind (unable to see) is combined with the lexical
meaning of the noun man
(human being) and only one meaning of man is realized
in combination with blind.
The meaning of the same adjective in blind type is
different.
Structural
meaning of the WC is conveyed by the pattern of arrangement of
the component words, e.g. the WCs school grammar and
grammar school consist
of identical words but are semantically different
because their patterns are
different. The structural pattern is the carrier of a
certain meaning quality-
substance that does not depend on the lexical meanings
of the words school and
grammar.
III. Interdependence of Structure and Meaning in
Word-Combinations
The
pattern of the WC is the syntactic structure in which a given word is
used as its head: to build + N (to build a house); to
rely + on + N (to rely on sb).
The pattern and meaning of head-words are
interdependent. The same head-word
is semantically different in different patterns, cf.:
get+N (get a letter); get+to+N
(get to Moscow); get+N+inf (get sb to come).
In these
patterns notional words are represented in conventional symbols
whereas form-words are given in their usual graphic
form. The reason is that
individual form-words may change the meaning of the
word with which it is
combined: anxious+for+N (anxious for news),
anxious+about+N (anxious about
his health).
Structurally simple patterns are usually polysemantic: the pattern
take+N
represents several meanings of the polysemantic
head-word: take tea (coffee), take
neasures (precautions). Structurally complex patterns
are usually monosemantic:
the pattern take+to+N represents only one meaning of
take – take to sports (to sb).
IV. Motivation in
Word-Combinations
Motivation
in WCs may be lexical or grammatical (structural). The WC is
motivated if its meaning is deducible from the
meaning, order and arrangement of
its components: red flower – red+flower –
quality+substance – A+N. Non-
motivated WCs are indivisible lexically and
structurally. They are called
phraseological units.
The WC is
lexially non-motivated if its combined lexical meaning is not
deducible from the meaning of its components: red tape
–bureaucratic methods.
The WC represents a single indivisible semantic
entity.
The WC is
structurally non-motivated if the meaning of its pattern is not
deducible from the order and arrangement of its
components: red tape – substance
– N. The WC represents a single indivisible structural
entity.
V. Categories of
Word-Combinations
The study
of WCs is based on the following set of oppositions each
constituting a separate category:
1. Neutral
and stylistically marked WCs: old coat – old boy;
2.
Variable and stable WCs: take a pen – take place;
3.
Non-idiomatic and idiomatic WCs: to speak plainly – to call a spade a
spade;
4.
Usual and occasional WCs: blue sky – angry sky;
5.
Conceptually determined and conceptually non-determined WCs: clean
dress – clean dirt;
6.
Sociolinguistically determined and sociolinguistically non-determined
WCs:
cold war – cold soup.
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