
- •What Is Lexicology?
- •1.1 Definition of Lexicology
- •The Structure of the English Lexicon
- •2.1 Words and their Associative Fields
- •2.2 Word Families
- •2.3 Word Classes
- •2.4 Semantic, or Lexical, Fields
- •Synchronistic and Diachronistic Approaches to the Structure of the English Vocabulary
- •2.2 English Lexemes of Native Origin
- •2.3 Borrowed, or Loan, Lexemes
- •2.3.1 Borrowings from Latin
- •2.3.2 Scandinavian Borrowings
- •2.3.3 Loans from French
- •2.3.4 Spanish Loanwords
- •2.3.5 Borrowings from Italian
- •2.3.6 Loans from Dutch and German
- •2.3.7 Borrowings from Slavic, Hungarian, and Turkish
- •Classification of Borrowings according to the Degree of Assimilation
- •2.5 Etymological Doublets
- •2.6 Folk Etymology
- •The Word
- •3.1 Defining a Word
- •3.2 Morphological Structure of Words
- •3.2.1 Word Structure
- •3.2.2 Stems
- •3.2.3 Types of affixes
- •3.2.4 Derivational and Functional Affixes
- •Inflection of Derived or Compound Words
- •3.3 Cliticization
- •3.4 Internal Change/Alternation
- •3.5 Suppletion
- •3.6 Reduplication
- •Word Formation
- •4.1 Derivation
- •V ? Athe act of X’ing
- •V ? Vnot X
- •4.1.1 Types of Derivational Affixes
- •4.3.1 Classification of Compounds
- •4.3.2 Endocentric and Exocentric Compounds
- •4.4 Reduplication
- •4.5 Conversion
- •4.6 Blending
- •4.7 Backformation
- •4.8 Clipping
- •4.9 Acronyms and Abbreviations
- •Semantics
- •5.1 Types of Semantics
- •5.2 Linguistic Sign
- •5.3 Denotation
- •5.4 Connotation
- •5.5 Reference
- •5.6 Sense
- •5.7 Semantics and Change of Meaning
- •5.9 Sense Relations
- •5.9.1 Similarity of Sense
- •5.9.2 Oppositeness of Sense
- •5.9.3 Meaning Categories: Hyponymy
- •5.9.4 Meronymy
- •5.9.5 Related Meanings
- •5.9.6 Different Meanings: Homonymy
- •Homonyms
- •Homophones homographs homonyms proper
- •Phraseology
- •6.1 Definition
- •6.2 Classification of phraseologisms
- •6.3 The Origin of Phraseological Units
- •6.3.1 Native Phraseological Units
- •6.3.2 Borrowed Phraseological Units
- •6.4 Semantic Structure of Phraseological Units
- •6.5 Semantic Relations of Phraseological Units
- •6.5.1 Similarity of Sense
- •6.5.2 Oppositeness of Sense
- •Major Differences between American and British variants of the English Language
- •7.1 Differences in Vocabulary
- •7.2 Spelling Differences
- •7.3 Grammatical Differences
- •Lexicography
- •I need to add Types of Dictionaries
2.3 Word Classes
When the structural linguists tried to identify the word categories of English, “they looked at the words themselves, at their forms, their meanings, and their functions in the sentence, and then established two main categories: the “form classes (nouns, verbs, adjectives, and adverbs)” and “the structure classes” (Kolln & Funk, 2012, p.16). The structure classes consist of the following classes: determiners, auxiliaries, conjunctions, qualifiers, interrogatives, expletives, and prepositions. One of the differences between the classes is their form. “As their label suggests, the form classes are those that can undergo changes in form— that are, in fact, distinguishable by their form— whereas the structure classes are not” (p. 226). Determiners are words that mark nouns, among which the following groups are identified: articles (a, an, and the), possessive nouns and pronouns (Dan’s, my, his, her, its, our, your, and their), demonstrative pronouns (this, that, these, and those), and indefinite pronouns (some, both, each, another, anybody, anyone, anything, something, many, much, few, etc.), numerals (one, two, etc). Like determiners, auxiliaries are closed words. The auxiliary class contains the following: do (does and did), have (has and had), be (am, is, are, was, and were), can (could), must, may (might), should, etc.
Among conjunctions, we can identify coordinating conjunctions (for, and, nor, but, or, yet, and so), subordinating conjunctions (time: when, whenever, after, as, before, once, since, till, until, now that, while, as long as, as soon as; concession: though, although, even though, if, while; contingency: if, once; condition: if, in case, as long as, unless, provided that; reason: because, since, as long as; result: so that; comparison: as, just as, as if; contrast: while, whereas), and correlative conjunctions (both– and , either– or , neither– nor , not only– but also).
Qualifiers mark adjectives and adverbs. They qualify or intensify adjectives and adverbs: very beautiful, rather impressive, damn sure, and rather slowly. Interrogatives, as their name implies, introduce questions: who, whose, whom, which, what, how, why, when, and where. Expletive words, sometimes called empty words, act simply as operators that allow us to manipulate sentences in a variety of ways. The following are expletives: there transformation (There is a book on the table); that (I think that he is a good doctor); or (the structure of the English lexicon, or vocabulary); as (We elected him as the chair) (Kolln & Funk, 2012, pp.282-284).
A preposition links nouns, pronouns, and phrases to other words in a sentence. The word or phrase that the preposition introduces is called the object of the preposition. Prepositions are subdivided into simple prepositions (about, beneath, into, through, above, beside, throughout, across, between, after, beyond, of, to, against off, toward, along, by, on, under, amid, underneath, among, around, down, outside, within, before, from, without, etc.) and phrasal prepositions which consist of a simple preposition preceded by a word from another category, such as an adverb, adjective, or conjunction (according to, because of, next to, ahead of, out of, along with, contrary to, prior to, by means of, in charge of, in spite of, in accordance with, in front of, on account of, in back of, in lieu of, on behalf of, in case of, in search of, etc.) (Kolln & Funk, 2012, pp. 274-276).
Form classes comprise the largest group of words. They are called “open classes because new nouns, verbs, adjectives, and adverbs regularly enter the language as new technology and new ideas require them.” Id. at 225. Structure classes stay stable; that is why, they are called closed classes because they “remain constant from one generation to the next.” Id. at 265.