compound-shortened words consisting of two clippings of words
».
Splinters have only one function in English: they serve to change the lexical meaning of the same part of speech,
whereas prefixes and suffixes can also change the part-of-speech meaning , e.g. the prefix «en-» and its allomorph
«em» can form verbs from noun and adjective stems («embody», «enable», «endanger»), «be-» can form verbs from
noun and adjective stems («becloud», «benumb»), «post-» and «pre-» can form adjectives from noun stems («pre-
election campaign», «post-war events»). The main function of suffixes is to form one part of speech from another
part of speech, e.g. «-er», «-ing», «-ment» form nouns from verbal stems («teacher», «dancing», «movement»), «-
ness», «-ity» are used to form nouns from adjective stems («clannishnes», «marginality»).
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 inlexion, e.g. «deristricted»,
«unemployed».
Compound words
consist of two or more root morphemes and an inflexion, e.g. «baby-moons», «wait-and-see
(policy)».
Compound-derived words
consist of two or more root morphemes, one or more affixes and an inflexion, e.g.
«middle-of-the-roaders», «job-hopper».
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.
As far as words with splinters are concerned it is difficult to distinguish between derived words and compound-
shortened words. If a splinter is treated as an affix (or a semi-affix) the word can be called derived , e.g.-,
«telescreen», «maxi-taxi» , «shuttlegate», «cheeseburger». But if the splinter is treated as a lexical shortening of one
of the stems , the word can be called compound-shortened word formed from a word combination where one of the
components was shortened, e.g. «busnapper» was formed from « bus kidnapper», «minijet» from «miniature jet».
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. 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».
Among language units we can also point out word combinations of different structural types of idiomatic and non-
idiomatic character, such as «the first fiddle», «old salt» and «round table», «high road». There are also sentences
which are studied by grammarians.
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.
WORDBUILDING
Word-building is one of the main ways of enriching vocabulary. There are four main ways of word-building in
modern English: affixation, composition, conversion, abbreviation. There are also secondary ways of word-building:
sound interchange, stress interchange, sound imitation, blends, back formation.
AFFIXATION
Affixation is one of the most productive ways of word-building throughout the history of English. It consists in
adding an affix to the stem of a definite part of speech. Affixation is divided into suffixation and prefixation.
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