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== Lexicalization and other mechanisms in the lexicon == {{anchor#Lexicalization}} A central role of the lexicon is documenting established ''lexical norms and conventions''. [[Lexicalization]] is the process by which new words, having gained widespread usage, enter the lexicon. Since lexicalization<ref name="Geert2005">{{cite book |last=Geert |first=Booij |title=The grammar of words : an introduction to linguistic morphology |series=Oxford textbooks in linguistics |year=2005 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=0-19-928042-8}}</ref> may modify lexemes phonologically and morphologically, it is possible that a single etymological source may be inserted into a single lexicon in two or more forms. These pairs, called a [[Doublet (linguistics)|doublet]], are often close semantically. Two examples are ''[[wikt:aptitude|aptitude]]'' versus ''[[wikt:attitude|attitude]]'' and ''[[wikt:employ|employ]]'' versus ''[[wikt:imply|imply]]''.<ref name="Skeat 2010">{{cite book |last=Skeat |first=Walter |title=A Concise Etymological Dictionary of the English Language |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=wRGhnkZq3HQC |date=2010-04-17 |publisher=Forgotten Books |isbn=978-1-4400-5722-9 |page=648}}</ref> The mechanisms, not mutually exclusive, are:<ref>{{cite book |last=Ornan |first=Uzzi |author-link=Uzzi Ornan |title=The Final Word β Mechanism For Hebrew Word Generation |year=2003 |publisher=Haifa University Press |location=Haifa |language=he}}</ref> * Innovation,<ref>{{cite book |last=Metcalf |first=Allan |title=Predicting New Words β The Secrets of Their Success |year=2002 |publisher=Houghton Mifflin Company |location=Boston |isbn=0-618-13006-3 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/predictingnewwor00alla }}</ref> the planned creation of new roots (often on a large-scale), such as ''slang'', ''branding''. * Borrowing of foreign words. * [[Compound (linguistics)|Compounding]] (composition), the combination of lexemes to make a single word. * [[Abbreviation]] of compounds. * [[Acronyms]], the reduction of compounds to their initial letters, such as [[wikt:NASA|NASA]] and [[wikt:laser|laser (from "LASER")]]. * [[Inflection]], a morphology change with a category, such as a number or tense. * [[Morphological derivation|Derivation]], a morphological change resulting in a change of category. * [[Agglutination]], the compounding of morphemes into a single word. ===Neologisms (new words)=== [[Neologism]]s are new lexeme candidates which, if they gain wide usage over time, become part of a language's lexicon. Neologisms are often introduced by children who produce erroneous forms by mistake.<ref name="Jaeger2005">{{cite book |last=Jaeger |first=Jeri J. |title=Kid's slips: what young children's slips of the tongue reveal about language development |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=g1YGd1FkRgAC |access-date=8 April 2012 |year=2005 |publisher=Psychology Press |isbn=978-0-8058-3579-3}}</ref> Other common sources are slang and advertising. ===Neologisms that maintain the sound of their external source=== There are two types of borrowings (neologisms based on external sources) that retain the sound of the [[Source language (translation)|source language]] material: * Borrowing using the source language lexical item as the basic material for the neologization: guestwords, foreignisms and loanwords * Borrowing using a target language lexical items as the basic material for the neologization: phono-semantic matching, semanticized phonetic matching and phonetic matching. ====Guestwords, foreignisms and loanwords==== The following are examples of external lexical expansion using the [[Source language (translation)|source language]] lexical item as the basic material for the neologization, listed in decreasing order of phonetic resemblance to the original lexical item (in the source language):<ref>Page 8 in ''[[Language Contact and Lexical Enrichment in Israeli Hebrew]]'', by [[Ghil'ad Zuckermann]], [[Palgrave Macmillan]], 2003.</ref> * Guestword (in German: ''Gastwort''): unassimilated borrowing. * Foreignism (in German: ''Fremdwort''): foreign word, e.g. phonetic adaptation. * Loanword (in German: ''Lehnwort''): totally assimilated borrowing, e.g. morphemic adaptation. ====Phono-semantic matches, semanticized phonetic matches and phonetic matches==== The following are examples of simultaneous external and internal lexical expansion using [[Target language (translation)|target language]] lexical items as the basic material for the neologization but still resembling the sound of the lexical item in the source language:<ref>Page 8 in ''Language Contact and Lexical Enrichment in Israeli Hebrew'', by Ghil'ad Zuckermann, Palgrave Macmillan, 2003.</ref> * [[Phono-semantic matching]] (PSM): the target language material is originally similar to the source language lexical item both phonetically and semantically. * Semanticized phonetic matching (SPM): the target language material is originally similar to the source language lexical item phonetically, and only in a loose way semantically. * Phonetic matching (PM): the target language material is originally similar to the source language lexical item phonetically but not semantically. ===Role of morphology=== Another mechanism involves [[Generative grammar|generative]] devices that combine morphemes according to a language's rules. For example, the [[Suffix (linguistics)|suffix]] "-able" is usually only added to [[transitive verb]]s, as in "readable" but not "cryable". ===Compounding=== A compound word is a lexeme composed of several established lexemes, whose semantics is not the sum of that of their constituents. They can be interpreted through [[analogy]], [[Pragmatics|common sense and, most commonly, context]].<ref name="Geert2005" /> Compound words can have simple or complex morphological structures. Usually, only the head requires inflection for agreement. Compounding may result in lexemes of unwieldy proportion. This is compensated by mechanisms that reduce the length of words. A similar phenomenon has been recently shown to feature in social media also where hashtags compound to form longer-sized hashtags that are at times more popular than the individual constituent hashtags forming the compound.<ref name="Maity2016">Suman Kalyan Maity, Ritvik Saraf and Animesh Mukherjee (2016). #Bieber + #Blast = #BieberBlast: Early Prediction of Popular Hashtag Compounds. In ''ACM CSCW'', San Francisco, CA.</ref> Compounding is the most common of word formation strategies cross-linguistically.
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