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Methods of lexicological research




LEXICOLOGY AS A BRANCH OF LINGUISTICS

 

1. Lexicology as a branch of linguistics. Object, main concepts, theoretical and practical value of lexicology.

2. Lexicology in its relations to other levels of linguistic structure and other branches of linguistics.

3. Some general problems of the theory of word.

3.1. The size-of-unit problem.

3.1.1. The word and the morpheme.

3.1.2. The word and the word combination.

3.2. The identity-of-unit problem.

3.2.1. Phonetic variation.

3.2.2. Morphological variation.

3.2.3. Semantic variation.

4. Vocabulary as a system.

5. Methods of lexicological research.

 

RECOMMENDED READING:

Arnold, Irina. The English Word. - Moscow: Vyshaja Shkola. 1966. Chapter 1 Introduction P. 11 50.; Chapter 11 English Vocabulary as a System P. 249 274.

.., .., .. : . . 3- -. - .: , 2001. C. 6 12.

Rayevskaya N.M. English Lexicology. Kiev.: Vysca Scola, 1979. P. 10 44.

MAIN CONCEPTS OF THE THEME:


applied lexicology,

basic unit

comparative lexicology,

context,

contrastive lexicology,

descriptive/synchronic lexicology,

dialectology,

etymology,

extra-linguistic sphere,

general lexicology,

historical/diachronic lexicology,

ICs analysis

lexeme,

lexical system

lexicography

lexicology,

lexicon

motivation

onomasiology,

paradigmatics,

phraseology,

semasiology,

set expression,

special lexicology,

syntagmatics,

theoretical lexicology

vocabulary,

word equivalent,

word,

word-combination

word-group/word-grouping/word family,

wordstock/ stock of words

 

 


 


THEME IN A NUTSHELL

Lexicology is a branch of linguistics, inquiring into the origins and meanings of words.

English lexicology aims at investigating and studying the morphological structures of English words and word equivalents, their semantic structures, relations, historical development, formation and usages. Its a theoretically oriented course.

English lexicology is a subbranch of linguistics, but it embraces other academic disciplines, such as phonetics, morphology, semantics, etymology, stylistics, lexicography.

Branches of lexicology: onomasiology (naming and nominative processes), semasiology (theory of meaning), etymology (source of vocabulary and word origin), phraseology (theory of set expressions), lexicography (the theory and practice of compiling dictionaries), onomastics (the study of the history and origin of proper names, esp. personal names), terminology (the body of terms used with a particular technical application in a subject of study, theory, profession, etc.).

Two main approaches to the study of words: synchronic and diachronic.

Two main types of relations: paradigmatic and syntagmatic.

BASIC CONCEPTS: WORD AND VOCABULARY

Word is a minimal free form of a language that has a given sound and meaning and syntactic function.

Four features:

1. a minimal free form of a language;

2. a sound unity;

3. a unity of meaning;

4. a form that can function alone in a sentence.

A word is a symbol that stands for something else in the world. Certain sounds will represent certain persons, things, places, properties, processes and activities outside the language system. This symbolic connection is almost always arbitrary, and there is no logical relationship between the sound which stands for a thing or an idea and the actual thing and idea itself.

Vocabulary: all the words in a language make up its vocabulary. It can not only refer to total number of the words in a language, but stand for all the words used in a particular historical period.

CLASSIFICATION OF WORDS

By use frequency: basic word stock and non-basic vocabulary

By notion: content words and functional words

By origin: native words and borrowed words

Basic word stock: the foundation of the vocabulary accumulated over centuries and forms the common core of the language. It constitutes a small percentage of the English vocabulary but it is the most important part of it. The characteristics:

1. all national character (the most important feature);

2. stability;

3. productivity;

4. polysemy;

5 collocability.

Non-basic word-stock includes: 1. Terminology; 2. Jargon; 3. Slang; 4. Argot; 5. Dialectal words; 6. Archaisms; 7. Neologisms etc.

Content words (notional words) denote clear notions, including: nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverb and numerals, which denote objects, phenomena, action, quality, state, degree, quantity. They constitute the main body of the English vocabulary and are numerous. Functional words (empty words or form words): do not have notions of their own. Their chief function is to express the relation between notions, the relation between words and between sentences. They include prepositions, conjunctions, auxiliaries and articles. Functional words make up a very small number of the vocabulary, remain stable. Functional words do far more work of expression in English on average than content words.

Native words (Anglo-Saxon words) were brought to Britain in the fifth century by the German tribes: the Angles, the Saxons, and the Jutes. They are small in number, about 50,000 to 60,000, but they form the mainstream of the basic word stock and stand at the core of the language. They have other two features: neutral in style and frequent in use. The percentage of native words in use runs usually as high as 70 to 90 percent. Borrowed words (loan words or borrowings) are taken over from foreign languages. English is a heavy borrower. Loans constitute approximately 80 percent of the Modern English vocabulary.

There are more criteria for words classification.

VOCABULARY AS A SYSTEM

The vocabulary of a language is not chaotic but systematic. Groupings can be distinguished according to several principles: synchronic, diachronic; semantic; formal (structural) etc.

 

aspect dimension taken into consideration groupings (popular terms) example of scales and illustrations
alphabetical aspect sound A B C D E etc A, ab, aba, abac, abaca, aback, abactinal etc.
rhyming aspect ness, deaness, librarianess, titaness, sultaness, drabnes,glibness, dubness
word length number of letters or syllables monosyllables, polysyllables man, nice, interesting
word frequency frequency of usage basic/core be, have, a, the, of
non-basic/periphery slang, argot, terminology, dialectal words, neologisms
morphological aspect number and type of morphemes root/morpheme words (one free morpheme only) hand
derivatives (min 2 morphemes, at least one is bound) handed, handedness, handful
compounds (min 2 free morphemes, bound morphemes are possible) hand-made, handclasp, hand-up, hand-to-scale
compound derivatives (min 2 free morphemes, and 1 bound morpheme referring to the whole) hander-up hand-tooled, hand-to-mouth
common morpheme root (word-family) hand, handclasp, handed, handedness, hand-up, hander-up, handful, hand-made, hand-pick, hand-picked, hand-to-mouth, hand-tooled, hand-to-scale,
affix (word-family) handful, hopeful, fruitful, beautiful; overdo, overeat, oversleep, overestimate
origin source (+degree of assimilation, + borrowed aspect) native   father, nose, cow, tree, red, be, to stand, to sit to see, to hear, fox, grass, fur, head, old, good bird, boy, lady, girl, lord, woman, daisy, always
borrowing/loan-word face, husband, table rajah, restaurant, cliché, datum, avocado, chao, lambada, pipe of peace, by heart, fair sex, superman
semantic, functional aspects notion content words (denoting clear notions) nouns, verbs, adjectives, numerals, adverbs
functional/empty/clear/form words (expressing the relations between notions, words, sentences) conjunctions, auxiliaries, articles, prepositions
lexico-grammatical aspect (several groupings constitute a part of speech) common lexico-grammatical meaning, paradigm, substituting elements and possibly a characteristic set of affixes English nouns, etc. personal names, animal names, collective names, abstract nouns, material nouns, object nouns, toponymic proper nouns, etc
linguistic and extra-linguistic aspect   the things which the words refer to are closely connected and occur together in reality; common part of speech and lexico-grammatical group thematic groups terms of kinship (father, mother, sister, son etc); colours (white, black, green, grey etc);
the things which the words refer to are closely connected and occur together in reality; signification, the system of logical notions, grammatical meaning is not considered ideographic groups verbs, nouns, adjectives together (light n, to shine v, bright adj.)
semantic aspect similarity of meaning synonyms     euphemisms     lexical variants nice-fine-beautiful, wonderful-cool-rad, motherland-fatherland; to die-to pass away-to go to Philadelphia; whoever-whosoever, whisky-whiskey;
difference in meaning antonyms paronyms malapropisms up-down, hopeful-hopeless; economic-economical; dance a flamingo ( instead of flamenco), reprehend- instead of comprehend
relations of inclusion hyperonyms/ hyponyms animal (cat, dog, pig)
semantic structure monosemic word radar, biochemistry
polysemic word face, hand, to go, heavy
semantic diffusion thing
semantic unity, structural stability, figurativeness phraseological units to show the white feather, to buy smth for a song, a snake in the grass, to bear a grudge
phraseological expressions The devil is not as black as its painted
free phrases to come home
stylistic aspect register neutral   to speak, man, often
literary-bookish/ formal words learned words   terms solitude, cordial, miscellaneous, knee-joint, still life
colloquial   standard/literary colloquialisms granny, let-down, baby-sit, touchy
substandard/ non-literary colloquialisms whatchamacallit, whodunit, absobludylutely
pragmatic aspect emotionality (attitude) appreciative neutral derogatory expletive words high-elevated/poetic words, profanity, obscenity, blasphemy; oath or swear words
quantitative change; time axis currency (period) neologism Nick (newly-industrializing company), teledish (aerial)
archaic words obsolete word, historism ere (before); diligence
frequential aspect frequency of occurrence basic (frequent) nonce-words   He ha-had (laughed).
motivation of structure structural pattern motivated mouth of the river, buzz, giggle, self-made,
non-motivated words with faded motivation to earn, table
sociolinguistic aspect function and regionality standard varieties, dialect, pidgin, creole etc British English, American English, Canadian English; Caribbean English; Manx English; Aboriginal English; Chinook jargon etc

NON-SEMANTIC GROUPINGS

alphabetical grouping

The sound is taken into consideration. Outcome is almost null with few exceptions of etymological value. For instance, words beginning with w are mostly native. Many words beginning with ph [f] and ps [s] are Greek (philology, psychology). Those beginning with sk [sk] are of Scandinavian origin (sky, skate, ski) and not palatalized, but the ones with sh [⌠] are native and palatalized (shirt);

rhyming grouping

The sound is taken into consideration but the other way round (game, fame);

word length

The number of letters is taken into consideration. Important for lexicostatistics, communication engineering. The number of letters and esp. syllables correlates to the word frequency, the number of meanings and stylistic characteristics of the lexical item.

word frequency

This approach is very important for lexicography and language teaching. The most frequent words are polysemantic and stylistically neutral.

MOTIVATION

Motivation is the relationship between the morphemic or phonemic composition and structural pattern of the word on the one hand, and its meaning on the other hand.

3 types of motivation: phonetical (hiss, bang, buzz)

morphological (reader. overgrow, eye-wash - self explaining words);

semantic (head of army, head of procession, head of cabbage).

Non-motivated words (to earn).

METHODS OF LEXICOLOGICAL RESEARCH

Distributional analysis, method of oppositions, substitution, IC s analysis, transformational analysis, componential analysis, semasiological analysis (reveals word meaning), onomasiological analysis of lexico-semantic groups (reveals peculiarities of the use of words in each language as well as the frequency value of words with different semantic components), onomasiological comparative (is intended to reveal the words which are used to denote one the same object).

 





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