Topic 10 Oposiciones Secundaria Ingles
Topic 10 Oposiciones Secundaria Ingles
Topic 10 Oposiciones Secundaria Ingles
CHARACTERISTICS OF WORD-FORMATION IN
ENGLISH. PREFIXES, SUFFIXES AND COMPOUND WORDS.
This topic is about word-formation in English and its characteristics so, in
order to explain clearly, I will divide my presentation into three different parts.
The first one will be about the main characteristics of the English language
regarding it lexis; the second one will deal with the main concepts that have to
be taken into account when dealing with word-formation in English. Finally, the
third section of my presentation will be about the processes of word-formation in
English, which are compounding, affixation (prefixation and suffixation), clipping,
conversion, backformation, blending, formation of acronyms, and eponymy.
Lets begin by looking at English lexis. It is often said that what most
immediately sets English apart from other languages is the RICHNESS of its
vocabulary. Websters Third New International Dictionary lists 450.000 words,
and the revised Oxford English Dictionary has 615.000, but that is only part of
the total. Technical and scientific terms would add millions more. Altogether,
about 200.000 English words are in common use, more than in German
(184.000) and far more than in French (a mere 100.000). The richness of the
English vocabulary and the wealth of available synonyms mean that English
speakers can often draw shades of distinction unavailable to non-English
speakers. Spanish, for example, does not differentiate a chairman from a
president. On the other hand, other languages have facilities English lacks
(Spanish, for instance, has the word rincn, and esquina whereas English has
only corner, and would have to use in the corner to mean en el rincn and
on the corner to mean en la esquina as well as, for instance, Eskimo has nine
words for snow).
A second commonly cited factor in setting English apart from other
languages is its FLEXIBILITY, which is especially noticeable in the fact that
many words function both as verbs and nouns, such as drink, sleep, look and
so on. English also tends to be very CONCISE, compared to other languages.
Fewer words may be necessary to express something in English. For instance,
morphemes. For example, cats contains two morphemes: the stem cat and
the plural morpheme -s. Likewise, the word feet must also contain two
morphemes: the stem foot and the plural morpheme, but these do not appear
as separate parts of the word.
Finally, to end with the second section of my presentation, as far as
morphology is concerned, I should say that it is the branch of linguistics that
studies questions such as this about the internal structure of words. There are
two main branches: DERIVATIONAL MORPHOLOGY and INFLECTIONAL
MORPHOLOGY. Derivational morphology deals with processes that change a
word with one part of speech or meaning into a word with a different part of
speech or meaning. For example, there is a regular derivational process in
English which creates a noun from a verb by adding -er (so walk becomes
walker). Another example is the process which adds un- to an adjective to
derive another adjective of opposite meaning (so like becomes unlike).
Inflectional morphology, on the other hand, deals with processes that
alter the form of a word without changing either its part of speech or its
meaning. An example is the regular -s inflection in English which creates plural
forms of nouns (so rat becomes rats).
It turns out that derivational processes always apply before inflectional
processes. Compounding -the process which joins two words together to form a
new word- is like a derivational process in that it must always occur before any
inflectional processes. We cannot add the plural inflection -s to rat before we
compound it with, for instance, infest, so we cannot get rats-infested*. Mice,
however, is an irregular plural which is not formed by an inflectional process (it
is just a separate word that we have to learn as the plural of mouse). We can
thus form either mouse-infested or mice-infested.
Once I have dealt with the most outstanding characteristics about the
English language in my first section, and with the main concepts about wordformation in the second section of my presentation, it is time for me to go on
with the third part of my presentation: the way words are formed in English
4
.
According to Bauer (1983), it can be said that there are different ways of
word-formation in English. These are the following: compounding, affixation
(prefixation and suffixation), clipping, conversion, backformation, blending,
formation of acronyms, and eponymy. Lets see them separately.
Firstly, as far as COMPOUNDING is concerned, I should say that it is the
way in which two or more existing words are stuck together, as it happens in
girlfriend, takeover, bittersweet or couchpotato. Compounds may be written as
two independent words (washing machine), as two words joined by a hyphen
(tax-free), or as one word (toothache). Often the three forms of the same
compound exist side by side. The meaning of a compound cannot always be
deduced from the separate meaning of the individual elements (hot dog).
Secondly, as far as AFFIXATION (also known as DERIVATION) is
concerned, I should say that it involves the addition of morphemes that do not
have word status, that is to say, it involves the addition of prefixes, suffixes and
infixes. Prefixes precede the root morpheme (un-happy), and suffixes attach to
the end of the root (happi-ness). On the other hand, infixes are inserted within
the word, but in English they do not really exist. The inclusion of prefixes and
suffixes, as said before, change the word in the sense that they can even give
the opposite meaning or transform it into a different word type, so giving a list of
prefixes and suffixes would be a never-ending task since there are hundreds of
them. It must be pointed that affixation is the most productive way of creating
new words in English. Good examples can be seen in the following table:
Affix
Prefix
Examples
Noun: non-starter
Noun, adjective
Negation/opposite
Adjective
Changes to noun
Prefix
Verb
Reverses action
tie/untie,
'un-'
Adjective
opposite quality
fasten/unfasten
'non-'
Suffix 'ity'
Adj.: non-partisan
electric/electricity
obese/obesity
clear/unclear,
safe/unsafe
Suffix 'ous'
Prefix
're-'
Suffix 'able'
Noun
Changes to adjective
Verb
Repeat action
Changes to adjective;
Verb
fame/famous,
glamor/glamorous
tie/retie, write/rewrite
print/printable,
drink/drinkable
is, that certain patterns related to word formation are repeated again and again.
By becoming aware of these processes, the acquisition of vocabulary may
become easier, and our learners may venture to try to guess how certain words
would be in English by applying processes of word formation to words they
already know.
However, vocabulary acquisition is an incremental process, and we as
teachers must concentrate not only on introducing new words, but also on
enhancing learners knowledge of previously presented words.