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Autore: | Moyna María Irene |
Titolo: | Compound words in Spanish : theory and history / / María Irene Moyna |
Pubblicazione: | Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia, : John Benjamins Pub. Co., 2011 |
Edizione: | 1st ed. |
Descrizione fisica: | 1 online resource (477 p.) |
Disciplina: | 465/.9 |
Soggetto topico: | Spanish language - Compound words |
Spanish language - Word formation | |
Classificazione: | IM 4380 |
Note generali: | Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph |
Nota di bibliografia: | Includes bibliographical references and indexes. |
Nota di contenuto: | Compound Words in Spanish -- Editorial page -- Title page -- LCC data -- Table of contents -- List of figures -- List of tables -- List of abbreviations used -- Preface & -- acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1. Overview -- 2. Structure of the book -- 3. Methodological considerations -- 4. Morphological change and compounds -- Chapter 1. Definitions -- 1.1 Introduction: The problem with compounds -- 1.2 Some preliminary definitions -- 1.2.1 Words and lexemes -- 1.2.2 Internal structure of lexemes -- 1.2.3 Inflection and derivation -- 1.2.4 Functional and lexical categories -- 1.2.5 The lexical/functional feature hypothesis -- 1.3 Definitional properties of compounds -- 1.3.1 Lexical input -- 1.3.2 Lexical output -- 1.3.3 Syntactic internal relations -- 1.4 Properties of compounds -- 1.4.1 Fixity -- 1.4.2 Atomicity -- 1.4.3 Idiomaticity -- 1.4.4 Productivity -- 1.4.5 Recursion -- 1.5 Some exclusions by definition -- 1.5.1 Etymological compounds -- 1.5.2 Syntactic freezes -- 1.5.3 Idiomatic expressions -- 1.5.4 Phrasal constructions -- 1.6 Some exclusions by justified stipulation -- 1.6.1 Learned compounds -- 1.6.2 Proper names -- 1.7 Summary of chapter -- Chapter 2. The internal structure of compounds -- 2.1 Preliminaries -- 2.2 Hierarchical compounds -- 2.2.1 Merge compounds -- 2.2.2 Predicative compounds -- 2.3 Concatenative compounds -- 2.4 Endocentricity and exocentricity -- 2.4.1 Headedness of hierarchical compounds -- 2.5 Compounding and inflection -- 2.6 Meaning of compounds -- 2.7 Summary of chapter -- Chapter 3. Finding compounds -- 3.1 Data sources and their limitations -- 3.2 Identification of compounds -- 3.2.1 Independent status of constituents -- 3.2.2 Compoundhood -- 3.2.3 Prosody and orthography -- 3.3 Historical periodization -- 3.3.1 Periods -- 3.3.2 Dating of compounds -- 3.4 Productivity -- 3.4.1 Measuring productivity. |
3.4.2 Limitations to productivity -- 3.4.3 Productivity vs. institutionalization -- 3.4.4 The representativeness of dictionary data -- 3.4.5 Academic folk etymologies -- 3.5 Classification of compounds -- 3.5.1 Lexical category -- 3.5.2 Headedness properties -- 3.5.3 Relationship between constituents -- 3.5.4 Internal structure of constituents -- 3.6 Summary of chapter -- Chapter 4. Endocentric compounds with adverbial non-heads -- 4.1 The [Adv + V]V pattern: Bienquerer -- 4.1.1 Structure -- 4.1.2 Diachrony -- 4.1.3 Special cases -- 4.2 The [Adv + A]A pattern: Bienquisto -- 4.2.1 Structure -- 4.2.2 Diachrony -- 4.3 The [Adv + N]N pattern: Bienquerencia -- 4.3.1 Structure -- 4.3.2 Diachrony -- 4.4 Relationship between [Adv + V]V, [Adv + A]A, and [Adv + N]N compounds -- 4.5 Summary of chapter -- Chapter 5. Endocentric compounds with nominal non-heads -- 5.1 The pattern [N + V]V: Maniatar -- 5.1.1 Structure -- 5.1.2 Diachrony -- 5.1.3 Special cases -- 5.2 The integral and deverbal [N + A]A patterns -- 5.2.1 Structure of integral [N + A]A compounds: Manirroto -- 5.2.2 Diachrony of integral compounds -- 5.2.3 Structure of deverbal [N + A]A compounds: Insulinodependiente -- 5.2.4 Diachrony -- 5.2.5 Special cases: Toponymic compounds -- 5.3 The deverbal [N + N]N pattern: Maniobra -- 5.3.1 Structure -- 5.3.2 Diachrony -- 5.4 Summary of chapter -- Chapter 6. Endocentric compounds with nominal heads and nominal/adjectival modifiers -- 6.1 The head-initial [N + N]N pattern: Pájaro campana -- 6.1.1 Structure -- 6.1.2 Diachrony -- 6.1.3 Special cases -- 6.2 The head-final [N + N]N pattern: Pavipollo -- 6.2.1 Structure -- 6.2.2 Diachrony -- 6.3 The [N + A]N pattern: Avetarda -- 6.3.1 Structure -- 6.3.2 Diachrony -- 6.4 The [A + N]N pattern: Falsa abeja -- 6.4.1 Structure -- 6.4.2 Diachrony -- 6.5 Summary of chapter -- Chapter 7. Exocentric patterns. | |
7.1 The [V + N]N pattern: Cuajaleches -- 7.1.1 Structure -- 7.1.2 Diachrony -- 7.2 The [Q + N]N pattern: Mil leches -- 7.2.1 Structure -- 7.2.2 Diachrony -- 7.3 Summary of chapter -- Chapter 8. Concatenative compounds -- 8.1 The [N + N]N concatenative pattern: Ajoqueso -- 8.1.1 Structure -- 8.1.2 Diachrony -- 8.2 The [A + A]A concatenative pattern: Agridulce -- 8.2.1 Structure -- 8.2.2 Diachrony -- 8.3 The [V + V]N concatenative pattern: Subibaja -- 8.3.1 Structure -- 8.3.2 Diachrony -- 8.4 The [Q + Q]Q concatenative pattern: Dieciséis -- 8.4.1 Structure -- 8.4.2 Diachrony -- 8.5 Summary of chapter -- Chapter 9. Historical developments in Spanish compounding -- 9.1 Introduction -- 9.2 Counting frequency or productivity? -- 9.3 Word order in syntax and in compounds -- 9.3.1 VO in Spanish syntax -- 9.3.2 Constituent order in compounds -- 9.3.3 Effect of the OV-to-VO shift on compound patterns -- 9.3.4 Effect of constituent order changes on individual compounds -- 9.3.5 Unchanged patterns -- 9.4 Morphological structure and constituent order -- 9.4.1 Two productive head-final patterns -- 9.4.2 Morphological structure and individual compounds -- 9.4.3 The word class marker and constituent order -- 9.5 The [V + N]N compound pattern -- 9.5.1 Productivity of [V + N]N -- 9.5.2 The acquisition of agentive deverbal compounds -- 9.5.3 Child acquisition and language change -- 9.6 Relative frequency of compound patterns -- 9.7 Endocentric and exocentric compounds -- 9.7.1 [Q + N]N compounds and exocentricity -- 9.7.2 Endocentricity/exocentricity of individual compounds -- 9.8 Remaining questions for compounding and beyond -- 9.8.1 What are the prosodic properties of Spanish compounds? -- 9.8.2 What is the status of linking vowels in compounding? -- 9.8.3 Do native speakers recognize the various types of concatenative compounds hypothesized?. | |
9.8.4 What happens to compound patterns in situations of language contact? -- 9.8.5 Why is hierarchical compounding always binary? -- 9.8.6 Why is there a crosslinguistic preference for nominal compounding? -- 9.8.7 How can language acquisition data help explain language change? -- References -- APPENDIX 1: Compound dataset -- Subject index -- Word index. | |
Sommario/riassunto: | This chapter deals with compounds with hierarchically identical constituents, referred to as dvandvas in the Sanskrit tradition and with a variety of other names in many accounts (e.g., co-compounds, copulative, binominals, etc.) (cf. discussion in Bauer 2008 and Wälchli 2005). In Spanish the two largest groups are made up of two nouns or two adjectives. These nominal and adjectival concatenative patterns have several subtypes each, which are discussed in Section 8.1 and 8.2, respectively. A much smaller group is made up of two concatenated verbs; this is an exocentric class, because the resulting compound is always nominal (8.3). Finally, there are complex additive numerals, which are possibly the clearest example of a productive class, since they are infinite by definition (8.4) (Table 8.1). |
Titolo autorizzato: | Compound words in Spanish |
ISBN: | 1-283-17494-4 |
9786613174949 | |
90-272-8713-9 | |
Formato: | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione: | Inglese |
Record Nr.: | 9910819385603321 |
Lo trovi qui: | Univ. Federico II |
Opac: | Controlla la disponibilità qui |