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Topic: Compound-(linguistics)


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 Compound (linguistics) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
English prefers another type of verb-noun compounds, in which an argument of the verb is incorporated into the verb, which is then usually turned into a gerund, such as breastfeeding, finger-pointing, etc. The noun is usually an instrumental complement.
Obviously, an endocentric compound tends to be of the same part of speech (word class) as its head.
A certain type of compound (endocentric) consists of a head, i.e.
www.wikipedia.org /wiki/Compound_verb   (876 words)

  
 Encyclopedia: Morphology (linguistics)
Historical linguistics (also diachronic linguistics or comparative linguistics) is primarily the study of the ways in which languages change over time, by means of examining languages which are recognizably related through similarities such as vocabulary, word formation, and syntax, as well as the surviving records of ancient languages.
Cognitive linguistics is a school of linguistics and cognitive science, which aims to provide accounts of language that mesh well with current understandings of the human mind, and is generally opposed to the more syntactocentric approaches to meaning in generative linguistics.
Theoretical linguistics studies diverse questions: how certain languages managed to communicate, what properties all languages have in common, what knowledge a person must have to be able to use a language, and language acquisition.
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/Morphology-%28linguistics%29   (940 words)

  
 Compound verb: Definition and Links by Encyclopedian.com - All about Compound verb
But this usage is not accepted in linguistics, because "compound" and "complex" are not synonymous.
Compound words with one- or two-letter prefix are solid, that is, they are unhyphenated.
Twice compound verbs-- a compound verb whose second component is already a compound verb-- are rare in most modern European languages.
www.encyclopedian.com /co/Compound-verb.html   (515 words)

  
 Compound - RecipeFacts
A compound is an area of land that is surrounded by fences, walls, or barbed wire and is used for a particular purpose, especially an area containing buildings and where the entry and exit of people is controlled.
In geometry, a polyhedral compound is a polyhedron which is itself composed of several other polyhedra sharing a common centre, the three-dimensional analogs of polygonal compounds.
An interval that is compound is an interval which exceeds or is wider than one octave, whereas a simple interval lies within one octave.
www.recipeland.com /encyclopaedia/index.php/Compound   (375 words)

  
 Root (linguistics) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Root morphemes are essential for affixation and compounds.
When several languages are believed to be children of one older language, linguists will compare each language to the rest, trying to find matching words and ultimately reconstruct the ancient root.
The root of a word is a unit of meaning (morpheme) and, as such, it is an abstraction, though it can usually be represented in writing as a word would be.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Root_morpheme   (512 words)

  
 compound on Encyclopedia.com
Compound quality in the mixing room: This paper from Krupp shows how raw material variations can affect final mix quality and throws more light on the differences between intermeshing mixers and tangential types,...
A compound is often represented by its chemical formula.
Two or more distinct compounds that have the same molecular formula but different properties are called isomers.
encyclopedia.com /html/c1/compnd-che.asp   (538 words)

  
 Keyword
Chomsky's linguistics are as warped as his politics.
Linguists Guy Bailey and Jan Tillery would say Anthony is exhibit A in a national trend that is spreading the uses of "y'all" beyond the South.
Yet in the view of many historical linguists, the chances of drawing up such a tree are virtually nil and those who suppose otherwise are chasing a...
www.freerepublic.com /focus/keyword?k=linguistics   (3368 words)

  
 Passband - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The two words are both compound words that follow the English rules of formation: the primary meaning is the latter part of the compound, while the modifier is the first part.
Note 3: The related term "bandpass" is an adjective that describes a type of filter or filtering process; it is frequently confused with "passband", which refers to the actual portion of affected spectrum.
Hence, one may correctly say 'A dual bandpass filter has two passbands'.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Passband   (400 words)

  
 Theory of markedness (from linguistics) --  Encyclopædia Britannica
the branch of linguistics concerned with the study of phonological, grammatical, and semantic changes, the reconstruction of earlier stages of languages, and the discovery and application of the methods by which genetic relationships among languages can be demonstrated.
Historical linguistics had its roots in the etymological speculations of classical and medieval times,...
Provides a transcript of the publication, Field of Linguistics, a calendar of events, and information on the establishment’s origins, objectives, principles, and periodicals.
secure.britannica.com /eb/article-35106   (833 words)

  
 Compound Verbs in Persian
In the compounds of the same type (i.e formed through combination) when the non-verbal part is a noun the verbal element is lexicalized and functions as an aktionsart marker.The meaning of these compounds may not be directly transparent and usually involves metaphoric extension.
I have claimed that in the compounds formed via combination if the non-verbal part is an adjective or a past participle (in passive)then the verbal element of the compound serves as an auxiliary.
Persian compound verbs are studied by traditional grammarians and linguists of different persuasions.
www.kkhec.ac.ir /linguistics%20articles%20abstracts/compound_verbs_in_persian.htm   (389 words)

  
 math lessons - Derivation (linguistics)
In that, derivation differs from compounding, by which free morphemes are combined (lawsuit, Latin professor).
In linguistics, derivation is the process of creating new lexemes from other lexemes, for example, by adding a derivational affix.
Derivation may occur without any change of form, for example telephone (noun) and to telephone.
www.mathdaily.com /lessons/Derivation_%28linguistics%29   (216 words)

  
 Anonymization.Net
This category is for stub articles relating to linguistics.
67.18.35.242 /-en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Linguistics_stubs   (144 words)

  
 Incorporation (linguistics) -
Incorporation is a phenomenon by which a word, usually a verb, forms a kind of compound with, for instance, its direct object or adverbial modifier, while retaining its original syntactic function.
Incorporation and plain compounding may be fuzzy categories: consider backstabbing, name-calling, knife murder.
In many cases, a phrase with an incorporated noun carries a different meaning with respect to the equivalent phrase where the noun is not incorporated into the verb.
www.grohol.com /psypsych/Incorporation_%28linguistics%29   (651 words)

  
 What is a compound?
A compound is a word containing a stem that is made up of more than one root.
In modular book: Glossary of linguistic terms, by Eugene E. Loos (general editor), Susan Anderson (editor), Dwight H., Day, Jr.
This page is an extract from the LinguaLinks Library, Version 5.0 published on CD-ROM by SIL International, 2003.
www.sil.org /linguistics/GlossaryOfLinguisticTerms/WhatIsACompound.htm   (88 words)

  
 AllRefer.com - verb (Language And Linguistics) - Encyclopedia
English verbs are inflected for person, number, tense and partially for mood; compound verbs formed with auxiliaries (e.g., be, can, have, do, will) provide a distinction of voice.
You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Language And Linguistics > verb
Some English verblike forms have properties of two parts of speech (e.g., participles may be used as adjectives and gerunds as nouns).
reference.allrefer.com /encyclopedia/V/verb.html   (284 words)

  
 Compound sentence (linguistics) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is a complex sentence, not a compound sentence.
The compound sentence is held together by the correlative conjunction "either…or".
In the English language, a compound sentence is composed of at least two independent clauses, but no dependent clauses.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Compound_sentence_(linguistics)   (284 words)

  
 Sentence (linguistics) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In linguistics, a sentence is a unit of language, characterised in most languages by the presence of a finite verb.
Traditionally, each sentence is regarded as having a subject, an object and a verb, even if one of these is implied.
For example, " The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog." The shortest legal sentences in the English language are "I am" and "I do" - although with some bending of the rules, the imperative "Go!" can be considered the shortest correct sentence.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Sentence_(grammar)   (284 words)

  
 compound
Lineage organisation of the Tallensi compound: the social logic of domestic space in northern Ghana.
Imidazoline compounds stimulate insulin release by inhibition of KATP channels and interaction with the exocytotic machinery.
A modification of the Jaccard-Tanimoto similarity index for diverse selection of chemical compounds using binary strings.
www.infoplease.com /id/A0813112   (182 words)

  
 compound - OneLook Dictionary Search
Phrases that include compound: compound interest, compound eye, compound fracture, compound microscope, compound sentence, more...
Words similar to compound: colonial, combine, compoundable, compounded, compounder, compounding, deepen, heighten, intensify, chemical compound, more...
Compound : NRC Glossary of Nuclear Terms -- [home, info]
onelook.com /?w=compound&ls=a   (439 words)

  
 The Aspectual Content Of Compound Verbs - Singh (ResearchIndex)
2 the problem of a method for treating the compound and conjun..
In Proceedings of the Eastern States Conference on Linguistics, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, 1990.
2 The Compound Verb in Hindi (context) - Peter - 1974
citeseer.ist.psu.edu /singh90aspectual.html   (482 words)

  
 Compound (linguistics) from LiveJournal
Also helps finding: Compoundlinguistics compund lingustics compoundw linguistica compoud lingusitics compond liguistics campound lingistics comound Compound (linguistics)
Result Page: 1 2 3 4 for Compound (linguistics)
Results 1-10 of about 40 for the Compound linguistics (0.10 sec)
www.ljseek.com /search/Compound%20(linguistics)   (841 words)

  
 Seminar abstracts
Both languages employ distinctive patterns of pitch (F0) and intensity prominence to signal contrasts between otherwise homophonous compound and phrasal constructions, though reversed in headedness (English: black-bird vs black bird; Vietnamese: flower-pink [rose], flower pink [pink flower]).
However, English but not Vietnamese requires compounds to conform to temporal constraints of word prosody.
Native and Vietnamese Production of Compound and Phrasal Stress Patterns
www.emsah.uq.edu.au /linguistics/seminar/abstracts.html   (930 words)

  
 Linguists Gone Wild! - Why "wardrobe malfunction" wasn't the Word of the Year. By Jesse Sheidlower
It's not actually "Word" of the Year; it can be a compound, phrase, prefix, or so forth, but we know we can't get away with promoting a "Lexical Item" of the Year.
The American Dialect Society, which meets in association with the Linguistic Society of America, is the main scholarly group devoted to the study of language in America, and most of the time, it devotes itself to serious concerns.
OAKLAND, Calif.—You know you're at the Linguistic Society of America's annual convention when the woman on the next treadmill at the fitness center is talking not about bond indexes or shopping tips, as would be the case back home, but about recent research on binding theory in head-driven phrase structure grammar.
slate.msn.com /id/2112150   (1172 words)

  
 Frequency effects in compound production -- Bien et al. 102 (49): 17876 -- Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
compound with a visually marked position on a computer screen.
compounds in a pair shared the second morpheme and were matched
we have a distribution of the compound frequencies of its members.
www.pnas.org /cgi/content/full/102/49/17876   (4610 words)

  
 Category:Linguistics - All About All
Linguistics is the study of human language, and a linguist is someone who engages in this study.
Articles on this topic in other Wikimedia projects can be found at: Wikimedia Commons Category Linguistics
Grammatical Categories and Cognition : A Case Study of the Linguistic Relativity Hypothesis (Studies in the Social and Cultural Foundations of Language)
www.allaboutall.info /article/Category:Linguistics   (130 words)

  
 Accusative: Free Encyclopedia Articles at Questia.com Online Library
Journal article by Edward L. Keenan, Jean-Paulin Razafimamonjy; Oceanic Linguistics, Vol.
Baron, who also has a doctorate in linguistics.
Journal article by Fritz Schweiger; Oceanic Linguistics, Vol.
www.questia.com /library/encyclopedia/accusative.jsp?l=A&p=1   (1277 words)

  
 'Grammar' @ encyclopaediaOnline: the FREE online encyclopaedia (encyclopedia), dictionary, and grammar reference site
The science which treats of the principles of language; the study of forms of speech, and their relations to one another; the art concerned with the right use and application of the rules of a language, in speaking or writing.
A grammar can be used either to parse a sentence (see parser) or to generate one.
A formal definition of the syntactic structure of a language (see syntax), normally given in terms of production rule s which specify the order of constituents and their sub-constituents in a sentence (a well-formed string in the language).
www.encyclopaediaonline.com /grammar.html   (1277 words)

  
 Sentences (from grammar) --  Britannica Student Encyclopedia
In grammar, sentences are said to be simple, compound, or complex.
Guidelines on English grammar, along with examples, describing compound, complex, and simple sentences.
Capital Community College, U.S. Instructional material on English grammar and writing, prepared by faculty of Capital Community College based in Connecticut.
www.britannica.com /ebi/article-201659   (749 words)

  
 LINGUIST List 2.336: Journal style, Compound nouns
Although were are especially interested in Dutch compounds, information on English compounds and Romance compounds (both fundamentally different in the sense that they are not written as one new word) will certainly be useful.
Proposal: it would be handy if on-line information on style requirements of linguistics journals was made available electronically.
Is there somebody among the readers of 'Linguist' who can give us some bibliographic information about the computational, cognitivist, or psycholinguistic treatment of compound nouns?
www.ling.ed.ac.uk /linguist/issues/2/2-336.html   (211 words)

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