1983
DOI: 10.1017/cbo9781139165846
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English Word-Formation

Abstract: Interest in word-formation is probably as old as interest in language itself. As Dr Bauer points out in his Introduction, many of the questions that scholars are asking now were also being asked in the seventeenth, eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. However, there is still little agreement on methodology in the study of word-formation or theoretical approaches to it; even the kind of data relevant to its study is open to debate. Dr Bauer here provides students and general linguists alike with a new perspecti… Show more

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Cited by 718 publications
(165 citation statements)
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“…Lexicalization is also often contrasted with institutionalization. For example, Bauer (1983) saw lexicalization as a process that followed institutionalization. Alternatively, grammaticalizaton is the process through which lexical items lose referential meaning as they gradually develop into function words that express grammatical information (Hopper & Traugott 2003).…”
Section: Na Ly Z I N G L E X I C a L E M E R G E N C E I N M O D E R mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Lexicalization is also often contrasted with institutionalization. For example, Bauer (1983) saw lexicalization as a process that followed institutionalization. Alternatively, grammaticalizaton is the process through which lexical items lose referential meaning as they gradually develop into function words that express grammatical information (Hopper & Traugott 2003).…”
Section: Na Ly Z I N G L E X I C a L E M E R G E N C E I N M O D E R mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Once the word has become an everyday 'tool' in the Internet (subject to semantic changes, meaning specialization and formal changes including those resulting from wordformation or word creativity), the next step is to use it as an element for humorous word-formation, although there is already a jocular component in the use of the alphanumeric writing we mentioned earlier, or in other graphic games, such as hyphenation ('Menudo O-W-N-E-D te has comido amiga' ['that's a good O-W-N-E-D you've just eaten up, my friend']). 25 Of course, this is a common occurrence in English, where puns are made (usually with blends and compounds; on the differences between these two processes see, for example, Bauer, 1983) using the word, as in Ronaldowned, i.e. 'owned by Ronaldo' ('Last I knew Ronaldo had a knee injury but still pwned Germany with 2 goals in the Final.…”
Section: Word-formation or Word Creativity With Owned In Spanish: Commentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A first set was extracted from a 56 million word subcorpus of the Bank of English, also known as the Collins COBUILD corpus. 5 Of the agentive -ee nouns mentioned in Bauer (1983), Marchand (1969, Barker (1998) andPortero Muñoz (2003) (included here under (15)) only 7 turned out to be attested in the COBUILD corpus, viz. attendee, enlistee, escapee, resignee, retiree, returnee and signee.…”
Section: The Systems Of -Er and -Ee Nominalizationmentioning
confidence: 99%