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English 121 09/29/05. The English Lexicon. What do we mean by lexicon ?. The study of the vocabulary of a language How words are formed How words develop over time How they are addressed in dictionaries How they relate to each other in meaning. Words…. What is a word?. Are these words?.
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English 12109/29/05 The English Lexicon
What do we mean by lexicon? • The study of the vocabulary of a language • How words are formed • How words develop over time • How they are addressed in dictionaries • How they relate to each other in meaning
Words… What is a word?
Are these words? • book • store • tooth • brush • God • mother Why would you call these words?
Are these words? • the • of • a • which • what • where Do all of these words fit your previous definition?
What does it mean to know a word? • You know how to pronounce it roof; either; route • You (generally) know what it means • You know how other words can be formed from it able; unable; disable • You know its category (noun, verb, adjective, preposition, etc.)
What counts as a word? • two-fifths • cutting-edge • fixer-upper • NATO • CIA
What counts as a word? • Mary • New York • Metallica
What counts as a word? • Book • Store Bookstore • Tooth • Brush Toothbrush • God • Mother Godmother 1 or 2 words?
What counts as a word? • bake; baking; baked • tell; telling; told • am; is; are; was; were; am; being • old; older; oldest How many words here? 4? 16?
Lexemes • Include the word and its related forms as a single construct • “A unit of lexical meaning that exists regardless of its inflectional endings” (CEEL, p. 118) bake, tell, old, be are all lexemes
How many words (lexemes) are in the English Language? • Depends on what counts as a word • If you use a dictionary, it depends on the decisions that dictionaries make. • Dictionaries written in the 1700s will not have the word telephone. • Dictionaries written in the 1950s will not have e-mail or fax • Is Metallica in the dictionary? By conservative estimates, between 450,000 and 500,000 English words.
How many words do people generally know? • Depends…what does it mean to know a word? • To use it? • To know what it means? Active vocabulary: words you actually use Passive vocabulary: words you know, but may not use (e.g., davenport; lorry; the lift)
The CEEL says… • Office worker • active 31,500 • passive 38,300 • Business woman • active 63,000 • passive 73,350 • College professor • active 56,250 • passive 76,250
How does a language get (and increase) its vocabulary? • Affixation • Re-fax that will you? • Compounds • toothbrush • Shortening • feds; poli-sci; narcs • Acronyms/initialisms • WASP; NAFTA; AOL; GPA • blends • smog (smoke + fog); mockumentary (mock + documentary) • borrowing • pecan; boomerang; kung fu; alcohol
Words and word meaning • We have lots of words that can refer to the same thing but are different. We can refer to these two different types of meaning as: • denotation • connotation
Denotation refers to the literal meaning of a word, the dictionary definition Snake: "any of numerous scaly, legless, sometimes venomous reptiles having a long, tapering, cylindrical body and found in most tropical and temperate regions."
Connotation refers to the associations that are connected to a certain word or the emotional suggestions related to that word The connotative meanings of a word exist together with the denotative meanings. The connotations for the word snake could include evil or danger.
Synonym Worksheet Do as a group…
Word origins • colleague--Latin through French (1524) friend—Old English (1018—Beowulf) contemporary—Latin (1742) peer—Norman (1321) associate—Latin (1389) buddy—from the U.S. (1850) mate—middle low German (1582)