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    TEMA 45- EL LXICO INGLS. ESTRUCTURA Y FORMACIN DE LAS

    PALABRAS. PRSTAMOS

    TOPIC 45: ENGLISH VOCABULARY. WORD STRUCTURE AND FORMATION. LOAN WORDS

    English vocabulary:

    The vocabulary of a widely diffused and highly cultivated living language is not a fixed

    quantity circumscribed by definite limits. English vocabulary contains a nucleus or

    central mass of many thousand words whose Anglicity is unquestioned, some of them

    only literary, some of them only colloquial, the great majority at once literary and

    colloquial. They are the common words of the language. They are linked with other

    words which pertain to the domain of local dialect, of the slang, of the peculiar

    technicalities of trades and processes, of the scientific terminology common to all

    civilized nations, and of the actual languages of other lands and peoples. There is no

    defining line in any direction: the circle of the English language has a well-defined

    centre but no discernible circumference.

    In addition to the common vocabulary, there is an indefinite number of proper or merely

    denotative names.

    The constituent elements of vocabulary are in a state of slow but incessant dissolution

    and renovation: old words are ever becoming obsolete and dying out; new words are

    continually pressing in. There are many words of which it is doubtful whether they are

    still to be considered as part of the living language. They are alive to some speakers and

    dead to others, and on the other hand there are many claimants to admission into the

    recognized vocabulary.

    Word- formation:

    The main process of English word-formation by which a base may be modified are:

    1. Affixation:

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    a) Adding a prefix to the base with or without a change of word-class:author- co-author.

    b) Adding asuffix to the base with or without a change of word-class: drive-driver.

    2. Conversion: Assigning the base to a different word-class without changing itsform. There is zero affixation drive (n)- drive (v)

    3. Compounding: Adding one base to another (tea + pot- teapot)

    Apart from these major word-formation processes. English has a number of minor

    devices: backformations, clippings, blends, reduplication and acronyms, as means of

    forming new words on the basis of old.

    Prefixation:

    Prefixes do not generally alter the word-class of the base. Productive prefixes normally

    have a light stress on their first or only syllable, the main stress of the words coming on

    the base. f.i: pre fabricated

    1. Negative prefixes:

    - UN-: the opposite of not: unfair, unexpected- NON-: not: non-smoker, non-drip- IN-: (as for un-): insane- DIS-: (as for un-): insane- A-: lacking in: amoral, asymmetry

    IN- is realized as IL- before l: illogical, IM- before bilabials: improperand

    IR- before r: irrelevant

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    2. Reversative or privative prefixes:

    - UN-: to reverse action, to deprive of: untie, unhorse- DE-: to reverse action: defrost, deforestation- DIS-: (as for un-): disconnect, discoloured, discontent

    3. Pejorative prefixes:

    - MIS-: wrongly, astray: misinform, misconduct, misleading- MAL-: bad(ly): maltreat, malfunction, malformed, malodorous- PSEUDO-: false imitation: pseudo-intellectual, pseudo-religious

    4. Prefixes of degree or size:

    - ARCH-: highest, worst: archduke, archenemy- SUPER-:above, more than, better: superman, supermarket,

    supernatural

    - OUT-: to do sth. faster, longer than etc.: outrun, outlive- SUR-: over and above:surtax- SUB-: lower than, less than:subhuman, substandard- OVER-: too much: overeat, overdressed overconfident- UNDER-: to little: undercook, underprivileged- HYPER-: extremely: hypercritical- ULTRA-: extremely, beyond: ultra-violet, ultra-modern- MINI-: little: miniskirt

    5. Prefixes of attitude:

    - CO-: with, joint: cooperate, co-pilot- COUNTER-: in opposition to: counteract, counter-revolution- ANTI-: against: anti-social, anti-clockwise- PRO-: on the other side of:pro-communist

    6. Locative prefixes:

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    - SUPER-: over:superstructure- SUB-: beneath, lesser in rank:subway, sublet, subconscious- INTER-: between, among: international, intermarry, interaction- TRANS-: across, from one place to another: transatlantic

    7. Prefixes of time and order:

    - FORE-: before:foretell, foreknowledge- PRE-: before:pre-war, pre-marital- POST-: after:post-war, post-classical- EX-: former: ex-husband- RE-: again, back: rebuild, resettlement

    8. Number prefixes:

    - UNI-, MONO-: one: unilateral, monotheism.- BI-, DI-: two: bilingual, dipole- TRI-: three: tripartite- MULTI-, POLY-: many: multi-racial, polysyllabic

    9. Other prefixes:

    - AUTO-: self: autobiography- NEO-: new, revived: neo-Gothic- PAN-: all, world-wide:pan-African- PROTO-: first, original:prototype- SEMI-: half:semicircle- VICE-: deputy: vice-president

    10.Conversion prefixes:

    - BE-: Nouns-participal adjectives: bespectacled, bewiggedVerbs/adj./nouns-transitive verbs: bedazzle, becalm, bewitch

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    - EN-: Nouns-verbs: enslave- A-: Verbs- predicative adjectives: afloat

    Suffixation: Unlike prefixes, suffixes frequently alter the word-class of the base, f.i: the

    adjective kind by the addition of the suffix ness is changed into and abstract noun:

    kindness.

    1. Noun- Noun suffixes:

    A. Occupational:

    - -STER, -EER: person engaged in an occupation or activity: gangster,engineer

    - -ER: varied meanings inhabitants of X: teenager, Londoner

    B. Diminutive or feminine:

    - -LET: small, unimportant: booklet, piglet- -ETTE: small, compact: kitchenette, statuette or imitation of

    material: flannelette or female: usherette.

    - -ESS: female: waitress- -Y, -IE: daddy, auntie

    C. Status, domain:- -HOOD: status: boyhood- -SHIP: status, condition:friendship, dictatorship- -DOM: domain, condition: kingdom, stardom- -OCRACY: system of government: democracy- - (E)RY: behaviour: slavery, place of activity or abode: refinery,

    nunnery, collectivity: machinery

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    D. Other:

    - -ING: the substance of which N is composed:panelling- -FUL: the amount which N contains : mouthful, spoonful

    2. Noun/adjective- Noun/adjective suffixes:

    - -ITE: member of community, faction, type:Israelite, socialite- -(I)AN: pertaining to:Indonesian, republican- -ESE: nationality: Chinese- -IST: member of a party, occupation:socialist, violinist- - ISM: attitude, political movement: idealism, communism

    3. Verb- Noun affixes:

    - -ER, -OR: agentive and instrumental: driver, actor- -ANT: agentive and instrumental: inhabitant, disinfectant- -EE: passive: employee, payee, trainee- -ATION: state, action: exploration, institution: organization- - MENT: state, action: amazement- -AL: action: refusal, dismissal- -ING: activity: driving, result of activity: building- -AGE: activity, result of activity: drainage

    4. Adjective- Noun suffixes:

    - -NESS: state, quality: happiness- -ITY: state, quality:sanity

    5. Verb suffixes:

    - -IFY: causative meaning:simplify- -IZE orISE (Br.E.): causative:popularize- -EN: causative deafen, becomes Xsadden

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    6. Noun- Adjective suffixes:

    - -FUL: having, giving: useful, helpful- -LESS: without: childless- -LY: having the qualities of: cowardly- -LIKE: having the qualities of: childlike- -Y: like: creamy, covered with: hairy- -ISH: belonging to: Turkish, having the character of:foolish- -IAN: in the tradition of:Darwinian

    7. Some adjective suffixes common in borrowed and neoclassical words:

    - -AL (also -IAL,- ICAL): criminal, musical- -IC: heroic- -IVE (also -ATIVE,- ITIVE): attractive, sensitive- -OUS (also -EOUS,- IOUS): virtuous, courteous, vivacious

    8. Other adjective suffixes:- -ABLE, -IBLE: able, worthy to be V-ed: readable, forcible- -ISH: somewhat:youngish- -ED: having: balconied

    9. Adverb suffixes:

    - -LY: in a manner: happily- -WARD(S): manner, direction: backwards- -WISE: in the manner of.: crabwise, as far as is concerned:

    weather-wise

    Conversion:

    1. Verb- Noun:

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    - state (from stative verbs to nouns): doubt, love- event, activity (from dynamic verbs): laugh, walk- object of V: answer, catch- subject of V: bore, cheat- instrument of V: cover, wrap- Manner of V-ing: throw, walk- Place of V-ing: retreat, turn

    2. Adjective- Noun: daily (daily newspaper), comic (comic actor), (young)marrieds ( young married people)

    3. Noun- Verb:

    - to put in/on N: bottle, corner- to give N, to provide with N: coat, mask- to deprive of N:peel, skin- to .with N as instrument: brake, knife- to be/act as N with respect to: nurse, referee- to make/changeinto N: cash, cripple- to send or go by N: mail, ship, bicycle, motor

    4. Adjective- Verb:

    - to make (more) adj. with transitive verbs: calm, dirty- to become adj. with intransitive verbs: dry, empty

    5. Minor categories of conversion:

    a) Conversion from closed-system words to nouns:

    - This book is a must for the students of aerodynamics

    b) Conversion from phrases to nouns:

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    -Whenever I gamble, my horse is one of the also-rans.

    c) Conversion from phrases to adjectives:

    -I feel very under-the-weather

    d) Conversion from affixes to nouns:

    - Patriotism, and any other isms you d like to name

    Approximate Conversion:

    In some cases, conversion is approximate rather than complete. The word may undergo

    a slight change of pronunciation or spelling.

    1. Voicing of final consonant: (noun-verb): advice/s/-advise/s/, thief /f/-thieve /v/,house/s/-house/z/.

    2. Shift of stress: When verbs of 2 syllables are converted into nouns, the stress issometimes shifted from the 2nd to the 1st syllable: conduct, contrast, export,

    import, permit, produce, record, refuse.

    Compounds:

    2. NounCompounds:A. Subject and verb compounds:

    - Noun + deverbal noun: sunrise (the sun rises)- Verb+ noun: rattlesnake (the snake rattles)- Verbal noun + noun: dancing girl(the girl dances)

    B. Verb and object compounds:

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    - Noun + Verbal noun: sightseeing(X sees sights)- Noun+ agentive or instrumental noun: taxpayer(X pays taxes)- Noun + deverbal noun: blood test(X tests blood)- Verb+ noun: call-girl(X calls the girl)- Verbal noun + noun: chewing gum (X chews gum)

    C. Verb and adverbial compounds:

    - Verbal noun + noun: swimming pool(X swims in the pool)- Noun + verbal noun: daydreaming(X dreams during the day)- Noun + agentive noun: baby-sitter(X sits with the baby)- Noun + deverbal noun: homework(X works at home)- Noun + noun: searchlight(X searches with a light)

    D. Verbless compounds:

    - Noun + noun: windmill(the wind (powers) the mill)- Noun + noun: toy factory (the factory (produces) toys)- Noun + noun: bloodstain (the blood (produces) stains)- Noun + noun: door knob (the door (has) a knob)- Noun + noun: girlfriend(the friend (is) a girl)- Adjective + noun: darkroom (the room (is) dark)- Noun + noun: frogman (the man (is) like a frog)- Noun + noun: snowflake (the flake (consists) of snow)- Noun + noun: ashtray (the tray (is) for ash)

    3. Adjective Compounds:

    A. Verb and object compounds:

    - Noun + ing participle: man-eating(X eats men)

    B. Verb and adverbial compounds:

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    -Noun + ing participle: ocean-going(X goes across oceans)-Noun + ed participle: heartfelt(X feels it in the heart)-Adjective/adverb + ing participle: hard-working(X works hard)- Adjective/adverb + ed participle: quick-frozen (X is frozen

    quickly)

    C. Verbless compounds:

    - Noun + adjective: class-conscious (X is conscious with respectto class)

    - Noun + adjective: grass-green (X is like green grass)- Adjective + adjective: British- American (the British and the

    American jointly)

    4. Verb Compounds:

    - Noun + verb: sightsee (X sees sights)- Noun + verb: spring-clean (X cleans in the spring)

    These are examples of backformations.

    Back-formations:

    Sightsee (s.o. sees sights), lip-read, baby-sit, sleep-walk (s.o. walks asleep, house-hunt,

    house-keep (s.o. keeps the house). These words come from such nouns as sightseeing

    and from a historical point of view cannot be describes as noun + verb compounds.

    Clipping or Shortening:

    It involves removing one or more syllables (often the unstressed ones) from a word. It is

    particularly frequent in informal speech and especially in the speech of children and

    young people.

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    a) Syllables may be removed from the beginning of the word:Telephone/phone, omnibus/ bus, aeroplane/ plane

    b) Syllables may be removed from the end of the word: advertisement/ad(vert), photograph/ photo, examination/ exam, publican house/ pub,

    zoological gardens/zoo, bicycle/bike.

    It is very common in Christian names: William/ Will, Bill,

    Benjamin/Ben, Philip/Phil, some of them have a pet ending in y or -ie:

    Victoria/ Vicky. Emilia/Emmy, in place names: The Trocadero/ The

    Troc, The Pavillion/ The Pav, The Victoria theatre/ The Vic and in

    medical words: doctor/ doc, veterinarian surgeon/ vet, laboratory/ lab.

    c) Syllables may be removed from both ends of the word: influenza/ flu,refrigerator/ fridge, Elizabeth/Liz.

    Blends or portmanteau words:

    In a blend 2 words have been fused, only a part of each remains and the meaning and

    resulting form is a combination of those in the component words.

    a) Formed by thefirst part of one word and the last part of the other:

    - Smog = smoke + fog- Brunch = breakfast + lunch- Motel = motorist + hotel- Breathalyser = breath + analyser- Electrocute = electric +execute- Eurovision = European + television- Swatch = Swiss + watch- Chunnel = Channel + tunnel

    b) Formed by the beginning of the 2 words:

    - Moped: motorized + pedal assisted bicycle

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    - Interpol = International + police

    Reduplicatives or alliterative words:

    There are compounds in which 2 or more elements are either identical or only slightly

    different. They are rather informal or familiar.

    1. The most common use is found in onomatopoeic words: tick-tock(of clock), ding-dong (door bell), hee-haw (donkey)

    2. They can also suggest alternating movements: flip-flops, zig-zag,see-saw.

    3. Instability and vacillation: shilly-shally, dilly-dally, helter-skelter4. To intensify: tip-top

    Acronyms:

    They are words formed from the initial letters (or larger parts) of words. New acronyms

    are freely produced, particularly of organizations

    a) Acronyms pronounced assequence of letters:

    1. The letters represent full words:

    - Y.M.C.A. Young Men s Christian Association- W.C. Water Closet- B.B.C. British Broadcasting Corporation- V.I.P. Very Important Person- U.S.A. United States of America- M.P. Member of Parliament- D.I.Y. Do it yourself

    2. The letters represent elements in a compound or just parts of a word:

    -TV television

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    -GHQ General Headquarters

    b) Acronyms pronounced as words:

    - N.A.T.O. North Atlantic Treaty Organization- U.N.E.S.C.O United Nations Educational Scientific and

    Cultural Organization

    - U.N.O. United Nations Organization- O.P.E.C. Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries- V.A.T. Value Added Tax- A.I.D.S. Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome- N.A.S.A. National Aeronautics and Space Administration

    Loan Words (Borrowings):

    1. The French element:

    The English extensive borrowing of words from French started even before the Norman

    Conquest. There was already a French atmosphere in the English court. From this

    period are the following words:purse, castle, turn mantle, clerkandfalse.

    In the 12th century and as a result of the Norman conquest of England, French became

    the language of the law-courts and of the church and schools and English was relegated

    to the inferior classes. Words that illustrate this are: justice, war, peace, prison, court,

    crown/ sacrament, saint, grace, mercy, charity, faith.

    After the conquest, the dominance of French has permanently affected the English

    language, especially when we talk about words related to cookery (dessert, ragout),

    dress (cravat), soldiering (attack, sentinel, campaign, corps, platoon) and also to the

    literary world (critique, memoir, profile).

    Some illustrations of this constant influence in the last centuries are: 18th century:

    detour, morale, and 19th century: prestige, mirage, massage and in the 20th century:

    garage, camouflage.

    We also find 300 Teutonic words which entered English through French: blank, blue,

    butcher, button, choice, coat, dance, fee and words of Celtic French origin: attach,baggage, bar, branch, brave, car, career, carpenter, carry.

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    The different evolution from Latin to French contributed to the existence of English

    variants or doublets such as: warrant/guarantee, warden/guardian, abbreviate/abridge,

    balsam/balm, debit/debt/due, pauper/poor, predicate/preach, supervise/survey.

    It is also remarkable the difference of meaning between borrowed French words in

    English and the French original words.

    English French

    Advice avis (opinion)

    Annoy ennuyer (to bore)

    Assist assister (be present)

    Defend defender (to forbid)

    Journey journe (day)

    Mercy merci (thanks)

    Rest rester (to remain)

    Apart from French the 2 modern languages to which English is most indebted are Italian

    and Spanish (also Romance languages).

    2. Italy: spreading the ideas of the renaissance was particularly influential in the16th century and especially with words related to music and art in general:

    attitude, cicerone, fiasco, influenza, isolate, motto, stanza, umbrella, aria, oboe,

    opera, piano, prima donna, fresco, colonnade, corridor, replica, studio.

    However, the number of words taken from Italian through French is even bigger:

    alarm, alert, apartment, artisan, caprice, caress, carnival, contrast.

    3. Spanish borrowings began at the same period (16th c.): armada, Negro,peccadillo, punctilio, renegade, anchovy, armadillo, caste, cigar, guerrilla,

    embargo, mosquito, sherry, vanilla.

    4. It is even more important the stream of words that Spain introduced fromAmerica to Europe (English included): cacao, chocolate, banana, potato,

    barbecue, maize, cannibal, canoe, hurricane, hammock, alligator, sombrero,

    canyon, ranch, and bonanza.

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    5. From the North American Indians we get: moccasin, raccoon, squaw, toboggan,tomahawk.

    6. From Portuguese: binnacle, cobra, madeira, port (wine), pimento, tank.

    7. From the various languages of the Balto-slavic group (to Which Russia belongs)English has received: mazurka, mammoth, polka, slave, knout.

    8. From Hungarian: coach, vampire.

    9. From Russia s immediate past: vodka, czar, soviet, intelligentsia.

    10.Hebrew words: religion: alleluia, amen, cherub, jubilee, manna, Satan, orientallife: camel, cider, ebony, elephant, cinnamon, sapphire, sodomy.

    11.Arabic words came mainly through Spanish and Greek: emir, fakir, harem, sofa,alcohol, algebra, artichoke, zero, magazine, cotton, giraffe, assassin, sugar,

    mattress and through Persian: divan, magic, caravan, tiger, scarlet, rice, lemon,

    spinach, chess.

    12.From India:pepper, china (ware), orange, candy, curry, sandal, jungle, bangle,bungalow, shampoo.

    A remarkable fact is the small number of words derived from China and Japan:

    13.China: tea, mandarin, chop (in chopstick)14.Japan:samurai, kimono, soy (bean), rickshaw.

    15.From Other Asiatic countries: junk, bamboo, taboo, tattoo

    16.From Other African countries: canary, chimpanzee, gorilla, zebra, tango

    17.From Australia: boomerang, kangaroo

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    18.From Eskimo languages comes the word igloo

    In conclusion, we must say that there is an English disposition to absorb the products of

    other nations, especially if we compare the English language with German and French

    which show an organized opposition to the use of foreign words. Otto Jespersen calls

    the English attitude: a case of linguistic laziness.

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    TEMA 46- LA PALABRA COMO SIGNO LINGSTICO. HOMONIMIA,

    SINONIMIA. ANTONIMIA. POLISEMIA. "FALSE FRIENDS".

    CREATIVIDAD LXICA

    TOPIC 46: THE WORD AS A LINGUISTIC SIGN. HOMONYMY, SYNONYMY, ANTONYMY,

    POLYSEMY. FALSE FRIENDS. LEXICAL CREATIVITY.

    The linguistic sign:

    A sign is everything that either by nature or by convention allows us to evoke an object or an

    idea. From the time of the Greeks, the sign is considered to be an entity constituted by the

    relationship between significance or meaning and significant. We can see in every act of

    human language that meanings are manifested through significants. The union of both

    constitute the linguistic sign.

    We can consider linguistic signs words as well as morphemes, which are the smallest units with

    meaning.

    The linguistic signs arbitrariness:

    The linguistic sign is arbitrary because the phonemes that form it lack meaning and it is

    its peculiar articulation to form the significant what gives us a given acoustic image,

    which in each language has a specific meaning. That is why if a Spaniard and a French

    man hear the word /lo/, the second one will interpret it as a reference to water, while thefirst one as a neutral pronoun or article.

    A very small change of place of phonemes in the succession we pronounce can changes

    the significant and so the meaning.

    The linguistic signs linearity:

    The difference between linguistic signs and other kinds of signs is that they are

    articulated in a temporal and successive order: S-U-N-D-A-Y. As a consequence of this

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    linearity we cant have 2 signs at the same time and each one has its own value due to

    the contrast with the preceding and the following ones.

    However, in signs of other codes f.i. a stop signal, a badge, we understand its meaning

    at once without having to follow a precise order in the perception of its elements.

    The human language s double articulation: (According to Andr Martinet).

    1. The first articulation refers to the morphemes, which are the smallest units in allspoken discourses with meaning: come-s.

    2. The second articulation refers to the phonemes. If we go on dividingmorphemes we find phonemes which are units without meaning: c-o-m-e-s.

    Homonymy and Polysemy:

    There are 2 main types of linguistic ambiguity due to lexical factors: homonymy and

    polisemy:

    1. Homonyms: are different words which have the same spelling and pronunciationbut different meanings (and origins).

    2. Polisemic words: One word having 2 or more different meanings but the sameorigin.

    These 2 phenomena may apparently look very similar bout there are 2 criteria which

    help us to distinguish them:

    1. We find Homonymy if the words which now show the same spelling anddifferent meaning have different origins but were confused in a later period of

    the development of languages.

    a) Seal: animal/ impressed markb) Race: contest/ ethnic groupc) Corn: maize/ hardening of the skin

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    d) Post: piece of timber or metal/ mail/ place where a soldier is stationed/after

    2. We find Polisemy if the native speaker has the feeling that the differentmeanings of a words are related or associated to each other, f.i: in the word

    mouth there is a metaphoric affinity among the different meanings of what the

    native speaker to be just one and the same word:

    a) Board: broad flat piece of wood/ table / meals/ governing body/ group ofpeople who administer a company

    b) Mouth: opening in head for eating, speaking/ opening into any hollow(river, harbour, tunnel, bottle)/ end of anything placed between the lips

    (pipe, flute)

    c) Eye: organ of sight/ look/view/ aperture/ slit in a needled) Fast: tightly (stuck fast)/ fully (fast asleep)/ abstinence from food/ quick

    Synonyms:

    It refers to a sense relationship in which different words seem to have the same meaning

    and are in free variation in all or most contexts: autumn/fall, big/ large.

    Close examination of words reveals that synonymy is always partial, rarely absolute

    (only in scientific terms) and there is a distinction in these words which prevents us

    from interchanging them in any context without altering their objective meaning,

    sentimental tone or evocative value.

    Synonyms may be divided into 5 major goups:

    1. Equivalents: that is, proper synonyms: to narrate/to relate, pail/ bucket

    2. Historical synonyms: one of the synonyms is obsolete or archaic: abhorrency/abhorrence, relief/welfare

    3. Synonyms belonging to different varieties of English: (British, American) lift/elevator, truck/ lorry.

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    4. Dialect or regional synonyms: clart/ mud, poke/ sack, flesher/ butcher, loch/lake

    5. Synonyms belonging to different styles or registers: beef/ complaint, nuts/insane, turn down/ refuse, decease (professional)/ passing (literary)/ death,

    daddy/ father

    Synonyms may also differ in the emotional response they evoke. Words in both lists are

    considered to be synonyms but the A words have more associations

    A B

    Carpenter joiner

    Statesman politician

    Strong-minded stubborn

    It has also to be pointed out that the number of near synonyms for any object or

    phenomenon indicates its relative significance in a culture: The Arabs distinguish many

    types of sand and the Irish have a dozen different words for potato:

    - Chat (small not very tasty)- Cutling (good for cutting and planting)- Marley (tiny but tasty)- Poreen (very tiny)

    Antonyms:

    It is the general name applied to the sense relationship involving oppositeness of

    meaning.

    It is useful to distinguish 3 types of antonymy or oppositeness:

    1. Implicitly graded Antonyms: are pairs of items like big/ small, good/bad whichcan only be interpreted in terms of an established norm for comparison: A big

    boy is not bigger than a small boy because big is to be understood only in thecontext of boys. In English, the larger member of the pair is the unmarked or

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    neutral member and so we can ask: How big is it? How old is it? How far is it?

    How high is it? without implying that the subject is big etc.

    2. Complementarity: refers to the existence of such pairs as male/female, dead/alive. The denial of one implies the assertion of the other. On the contrary, not

    being bad doesn t necessarily mean you are good.

    3. Converseness: Is the relationship that holds between such related pairs as:

    - John sold it to me / I bought it from John- John lent the money to Peter/ Peter borrowed the money fromPeter

    The most frequently occurring converse verbs are: borrow/lend, command/serve,

    give/take, lease/rent, teach/learn, buy/sell

    False friends:

    Speakers of a second language may come across certain words looking similar to words

    in their own language and wrongly assume that the meaning is the same. Such words

    are called false friends. The confusion might be because:

    a) of a chance similarity in the spellingb) the original meaning has changed over the years in one or other languagec) the original words was borrowed from the start and used differently

    1. actual/ present2. ignore/not know3. formidable/wonderful4. adequate/ suitable5. assist/ attend6. argument/ subject7. fabricate/ manufacture8. sympathetic/ nice

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    9. reunion/meeting10. remark/notice11. professor/teacher12. sensible/sensitive13. lecture/talk

    Lexical creativity:New creations of words in English

    2. Clipping or Shortening:

    It involves removing one or more syllables (often the unstressed ones) from a word. It is

    particularly frequent in informal speech and especially in the speech of children and

    young people.

    a) Syllables may be removed from the beginning of the word:Telephone/phone, omnibus/ bus, aeroplane/ plane

    b) Syllables may be removed from the end of the word: advertisement/ad(vert), photograph/ photo, examination/ exam, publican house/ pub,

    zoological gardens/zoo, bicycle/bike.

    It is very common in Christian names: William/ Will, Bill,

    Benjamin/Ben, Philip/Phil, some of them have a pet ending in y or -ie:

    Victoria/ Vicky. Emilia/Emmy, in place names: The Trocadero/ The

    Troc, The Pavillion/ The Pav, The Victoria theatre/ The Vic and in

    medical words: doctor/ doc, veterinarian surgeon/ vet, laboratory/ lab.

    c) Syllables may be removed from both ends of the word: influenza/ flu,refrigerator/ fridge, Elizabeth/Liz.

    3. Blends or portmanteau words:

    In a blend 2 words have been fused, only apart of each remains and the meaning and

    resulting form is a combination of those in the component words.

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    c) Formed by thefirst part of one word and the last part of the other:

    - Smog = smoke + fog- Brunch = breakfast + lunch- Motel = motorist + hotel- Breathalyser = breath + analyser- Electrocute = electric +execute- Eurovision = European + television- Swatch = Swiss + watch- Chunnel = Channel + tunnel

    d) Formed by the beginning of the 2 words:

    - Moped: motorized + pedal assisted bicycle- Interpol = International + police

    4. Back-formations:

    Sightsee (s.o. sees sights), lip-read, baby-sit, sleep-walk (s.o. walks asleep,

    house-hunt, house-keep (s.o. keeps the house). These words come from such

    nouns as sightseeing and from a historical point of view cannot be describes as

    noun + verb compounds.

    5. Onomatopoeic or echoic words:

    They are newly created words produced by vocal imitation of sounds in nature:

    boom, cuckoo, murmur originated in French and Latin and were inherited by

    English and words like: papa/ mama originated in baby s speech and belong to

    practically all languages. Other examples: buzz, fizz, purr, whirr, hiss, quack.

    a) In English there is an association between sound and meanings affording abasis on which new words may be created specially in vulgar speech.

    Initial sound bl- is related to expression of disgust: blamed, blithering,bloody and there is undoubtedly a common quality in words beginning

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    with fl- : flame, flare, flash, flicker or ending in sh: ,mash, crash, splash,

    clash.

    b) Reduplicatives or alliterative words: There are compounds in which 2 ormore elements are either identical or only slightly different. They are

    rather informal or familiar.

    5. The most common use is found in onomatopoeic words: tick-tock(of clock), ding-dong (door bell), hee-haw (donkey)

    6. They can also suggest alternating movements: flip-flops, zig-zag,see-saw.

    7. Instability and vacillation: shilly-shally, dilly-dally, helter-skelter8. To intensify: tip-top

    6. Acronyms:

    They are words formed from the initial letters (or larger parts) of words. New acronyms

    are freely produced, particularly of organizations

    c) Acronyms pronounced assequence of letters:

    1. The letters represent full words:

    - Y.M.C.A. Young Men s Christian Association- W.C. Water Closet- B.B.C. British Broadcasting Corporation- V.I.P. Very Important Person- U.S.A. United States of America- M.P. Member of Parliament- D.I.Y. Do it yourself

    2. The letters represent elements in a compound or just parts of a word:

    -TV television

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    -GHQ General Headquarters

    d) Acronyms pronounced as words:

    - N.A.T.O. North Atlantic Treaty Organization- U.N.E.S.C.O United Nations Educational Scientific and

    Cultural Organization

    - U.N.O. United Nations Organization- O.P.E.C. Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries- V.A.T. Value Added Tax- A.I.D.S. Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome- N.A.S.A. National Aeronautics and Space Administration

    7. Abbreviations:

    Abbreviations in English are formed in 2 main ways:

    1. The beginning of the word is given and at some point (after one letter or severalletters) the word is cut off with a full stop because what is missing is not needed

    to understand the sense of the word:

    - Syn. synonym- Tan. tangent- N. North- Co. Company- Yorks. Yorkshire- Berks. Berkshire

    2. Part of the middle of a word is omitted and only the first and last letters are used(and some other intermediate letter:

    - Wt. weight- Abp. Archbishop- Hrs. hours

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    - Ltd. limited- Yd. yard

    Kinds of abbreviations:

    1. Titles:- Mr. Mister- Rev. reverend- Capt. captain- Prof. professor

    2. Latin words:

    - Cf. confer (compare)- Etc. etcetera

    3. Measurements, weights, money, days of the week:

    - In. inch(es)- Yd. yard- P. penny- Oz ounce(s)- Kg. Kilogram(s)- Tues. Tuesday- Feb. February

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    TEMA 47- LA ADQUISICIN DEL LXICO Y SUS IMPLICACIONES

    DIDCTICAS. CRITERIOS DE SELECCIN DE TEXTOS PARA SU

    UTILIZACIN EN CLASE

    TOPIC 47: VOCABULARY ACQUISITION AND ITS DIDACTIC IMPLICATIONS. SELECTION CRITERIA

    OF TEXTS FOR THEIR USE IN CLASS

    Vocabulary acquisition

    Any discussion of vocabulary acquisition and of language performance needs to draw a

    clear distinction between comprehension and production, because they are different

    skills that require different methods in the classroom.

    Comprehension of vocabulary relies on strategies that permit one to understand words and

    store them, while production concerns strategies that activate ones storage by retrieving

    these words from memory and then by using them in appropriate situations.

    The priority this distinction assigns to comprehension is one of many reasons why a

    growing number of researches believe that comprehension should precede production in

    language teaching.

    The object of a vocabulary lesson is one of enhancing the different strategies for

    comprehension and production.

    Comprehension:

    1. Enhance understanding: The first task is helping students what unfamiliar wordsmean. It would be well at the beginning to assure them that they do not have to know

    all the words of a passage before they can understand its meaning, that a single

    mysterious word, or 2 or 3 will not prevent comprehension, and that it is this

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    understanding of the text that will be their greatest aid in deciphering these difficult

    words.

    We must also assure them that they need not know all the meanings of any particular

    word, but that they can be content knowing only a general meaning for it.

    We have to convince students that instead of looking up every word in a dictionary,

    they should rely on the techniques discussed below for discovering meaning. The

    dictionary means security but we should advise that the dictionary be used only as a

    last resort.

    A. Context clues: Guessing vocabulary from context is the most frequent way wediscover the meaning of new words, and do it, we have learned to look for a

    number of clues. Secondly we are guides by other words in the discourse to

    help us guess. Finally, grammatical structure as well as intonation in speech

    and punctuation in writing contain further clues.

    B. Word morphology: Morphology also offers clues for determining wordmeaning. Students have to interpret unfamiliar words for them by using the

    meanings of the affixes they have learned.

    2. Enhance storage in memory: The second task in teaching comprehension is helpingstudents remember words or more precisely helping them store words in memory.

    Function words can be omitted to memory rather quickly, simply because there are few of

    them and because they reoccur frequently. Most problems will occur with those content

    words that are not so easily pictured, that is, those nouns, verbs, adjectives and adverbs

    that stand for abstract concepts.

    A second fact about vocabulary and meaning is that form may be more important than

    vocabulary in remembering a vocabulary item. We rely on the form of a word to lead us to

    its meaning. Knowing the meaning of a word becomes the task of knowing its associations

    with other words, therefore to teach it the most effectively, we must present it in this

    network of associations.

    A. Mnemonic devices: One way we can enhance storage is by encouragingstudents to use memory techniques that will aid them in committing words tomemory. Although there is a great deal of resistance in many countries

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    towards introducing mnemonic techniques in the classroom, students

    everywhere seem to use these techniques and find them very helpful.

    B. Loci: They are the world s oldest and best-known memory device, described inevery self-help book on improving memory. Loci are based on the fact that we

    operate by cognitive maps which are familiar sequences of visual images that

    can be recalled easily. To memorize an item, one forms a visual image of it and

    places it at one of the loci in ones imagined scene. Retrieval of these items

    then comes about effortlessly when the entire scene is brought back to mind.

    C. Paired associates: The familiar direct method often attempts to associate avisual image with anew word. In teaching the word hard, the teacher might

    hold up a rock so that hard would be stored not as an isolated item but as one

    paired with the image of a rock.

    D. Key words: The student learns a word in the target language by associating itwith its translation in the native language in a special way. For example, in

    learning that the Spanish wordperro means dog one might notice that the first

    syllable of the new word sounds like pear and would then visualize a large

    pear-shaped dog waddling down the street.

    3. Perception and action: They are basic processes that affect language acquisition. Thesubject s interaction with the environment is a major factor in language acquisition,

    for this relationship provides the associations and requires the mental activity

    necessary for language learning.

    A. Formal grouping: It is by the form of vocabulary items that we usually try toremember a word. A knowledge of basic affixes helps learners decode words.

    Since Latin and Greek affixes often occur as compound words with bound

    bases, they are handled differently from roots with derivational affixes f.i: tele:

    far distant,phone: sound,photo: light, graph: write.

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    B. Word families: Many words built about a particular root are gathered. Eventhough the meanings of these words may be slightly different, clustering them

    will aid students in remembering their general meaning.

    C. Historical, orthographical similarities: A knowledge of the sound changesseparating the 2 languages will be of help, not only for understanding the

    vocabulary of classical languages, but for contemporary ones as well.

    Likewise knowledge of spelling conventions is useful. English students of French are aided

    greatly by recognizing the relationship of French to English es.

    D. Collocations: The meaning of a word has a great deal to do with the wordswith which it commonly associates. Collocations permit people to know what

    kinds of words they can expect to find together: to draw a conclusion

    Production:

    1. Vocabulary use: It is more important for students to use the newly stored language aseffortlessly and as quickly as possible than it is for them to wait for control of precise

    vocabulary, even though what they produce may stay far from the standard.

    A. Pidginization: One way to promote fluency is by encouraging pidginization,urging students to put language together the best they can and avoid the self-

    monitoring that would inhibit its use

    B. Derivation: in which we take the root and add affixes to it, is the mostcommon method for creating new words, for it allows us to expand vocabulary

    without memorizing new words and thus aids fluency.

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    C. Compounding: Another common way of forming new words is bycompounding.

    2. Vocabulary retrieval: The storage of information does not guarantee its retrieval.Techniques that enhance production will have to be centred on the meanings of words

    rather than on their forms, because most of our production has to do with searching

    for an appropriate meaning to fit the particular occasion.

    The most effective associative bounds for production connect the word and its meaning.

    The following are techniques that gather words in such a way:

    A. Situational sets: They are cohesive chains of lexical relationships in discourse:they are groups of words that are associated because of the subject of the

    text, its purpose or its construction. They are words related to a particular

    situation. A conversation about a department store would contain vocabulary

    such as price, floor, sales, charge, clothes, shop assistant, customer etc.

    B. Semantic sets: Words can be grouped as:

    - Synonyms: sofa, couch- Antonyms: wide, narrow- Coordinates: oak, elm- Superordinates: skunk, animal- Subordinates: fruit, pear

    Another kind of semantic set has to do with stimulus-response pairs such as accident-car

    and baby-mother.

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    C. Collocations: They are useful for teaching production as they are for teachingcomprehension. Collocations teach students expectations about which sorts of

    language can follow what has preceded.

    3. Lexical phrases:

    A. Prefabricated speech: Many theories of language performance suggest thatvocabulary is stored redundantly. This prefabricated speech has both the

    advantage of more efficient retrieval and of permitting speakers to direct

    attention to the larger structure of discourse, rather than keeping it focused

    narrowly on individual words as they are produced. Two and three-part verbs

    (put up, put up with), noun compounds (card player) and idioms and sayings

    (keep tabs on) are usually treated no differently from other vocabulary.

    B. Reasons for teaching lexical phrases: These phrases will lead to fluency inspeaking and writing, for they relieve the learner of concentrating on each

    individual word as it is used by allowing them to focus attention on the larger

    structure of the discourse and the social aspects of interaction.

    C. Methods of teaching lexical phrases: One method of teaching lexical phrases isto make students to make use of them the same way that first-language

    learners do, that is, by starting with a few basic fixed phrases which they then

    analyse as smaller, finally breaking them apart into individual words, and thus

    finding their own way to the regular rules of syntax. We can divide them in:

    1. Social interactions:

    - Greetings/ Closings: hello, good morning, goodbye, see you later.- Politeness/ routines: please, if you dont mind, thank you- Question/ answer: do you.? Are there? Of course, yes, there

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    2. Necessary topics:

    - Language: How do you say?- Shopping: too expensive- Autobiography: My name is, I am from- Quantity: How much is..? a great deal- Time: What time?- Location: Where is?

    3. Discourse devices:

    - Fluency devices: you know- Conjunctions: which means- Subordinators: in other words- Logical connectors: in spite of- Temporal connectors: the day after

    Social interaction and discourse devices provide lexical phrases for the framework of the

    discourse, whereas necessary topics provide them for the subject at hand.

    Criteria for selecting texts:

    First of all we must select the type of dialect, register, style and medium to be taught. In

    making this choice we will be guided by the objectives and other external factors such

    as level, time etc. After the type of language material has been delineated, we have to

    make a decision about how many and which items should be selected.

    External factors:

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    1. Objectives: The selection must be such that will enable the learners to carry out thetasks described in the objectives. It makes an important difference whether the

    selection is made within the framework of FLT for general purposes or of FLT for

    special purposes.

    2. Level: A course for beginners will not contain the same type and the same amount oflanguage material as a course for advanced students.

    3. Time: It is not the same whether the course in question is an intensive one or a non-intensive one.

    Selection of type of language material:

    1. Dialect: This choice will not be a difficult one, especially with beginners, since theforeign language learner will in general find out most use for the standard language. It

    is the variety mostly used in the media and in education.

    2. Register: It is very useful for FLT for special purposes. Registers are usuallydistinguished at the lexical level. It is the terminology belonging to a certain situation

    or subject area that distinguishes one register from another.

    3. Style: There are 5 styles: frozen, formal, consultative, casual and intimate ranked in ahierarchy of decreasing formality. The normal choice for a FLT for general purposes

    will be a formal style.

    4. Medium: It relates to the distinction between spoken and written language. There aresignificant differences between written and spoken language.

    When selecting a text we have to pay attention to the degree of L2 proficiency the

    learners have already attained, to their interests, to whether the texts provide reliable

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    information about the people whose language is being taught and the society they live

    in, to the degree of difficulty of texts, which is not only determined by the number of

    words and structures known, but also by things such as the subject matter of the text, the

    way in which the writer approaches the subject and the knowledge the learners already

    have about the subject.

    Authentic texts are hardly usable in elementary courses. At an advanced level it will be

    necessary to use authentic written and spoken texts if the objective is for learners to be able to

    understand the foreign language as it is used by native speakers.

    Lastly, the possibilities for exploitation of a text need to be taken into account. If one for

    instance selects original spoken texts, one should realize that such texts can usually only be

    used for training listening comprehension and as a starting point for discussion.