Clipped compound
In linguistics, a clipped compound is a word produced from a compound word by reducing its parts while retaining the meaning of the original compound.[1] It is a special case of word formation called clipping.
Clipped compounds are common in various slangs and jargons.[1]
Clipped compounds are similar to blend words because they may be made of two or more parts. However they differ from blends: in a blend the components may have independent meaning (motel= motor+hotel), while in a clipped compound the components were already in the function of producing a compound meaning (pulmotor=pulmonary motor).[1] In addition, a clipped compound may drop one component completely, e.g., "hard" for "hard labor", "mother" for "motherfucker" (a process called ellipsis).[1] Laurie Bauer suggests the following distinction: if the word has the compound stress, it is clipping, if it has a single-word stress, it is blend.[2]
Clipped compounds may overlap with acronyms, especially for compounds of short constituent words.
In the Russian language, a clipped compound may acquire extra suffixes indicative of the intended grammar of the formed word. In particular, the suffx '-k-' is commonly used, e.g., askorbinka for askorbinovaya kislota (ascorbic acid).[3]
Compound clipping is a common form of gairaigo formation in Japanese language, e.g., "convenience store" -> konbiniensu sutoa -> konbini
See also
References
- 1 2 3 4 Elisa Mattiello, "An Introduction to English Slang: A Description of Its Morphology, Semantics and Sociology", 2008, ISBN 8876991131, pp. 146-148
- ↑ Laurie Bauer, English Word-Formation (1983), Cambridge, “Cambridge textbooks in linguistics”, Cambridge University Press, 1993.
- ↑ Larissa Ryazanova-Clarke, Terence Wade, The Russian Language Today, 2002, ISBN 0203065875, p. 49
Further reading
- Denis Jamet, A morphophonological approach to clipping in English Can the study of clipping be formalized?