Delahunty and Garvey
142
constituent
: a unified part of a construction (e.g.,
of a word, phrase, or
sentence).
conversion
:
derivational relationship between two words of different parts
of speech but without any formal marking of the difference.
coordinative
compound
: a compound word
that denotes an entity or
property to which both constituents contribute equally; e.g.,
bittersweet re-
fers to a quality which is both bitter and sweet.
derivation
:
process of changing a word from one part of speech to another
or from one subclass to another, typically by making some change in form.
endocentric
compound
: a compound word
that denotes a subtype of
whatever is denoted by the head.
Armchair represents a type of chair;
breath-
test represents a kind of test.
exocentric
compound
: a compound word that
denotes a subtype of a cate-
gory that is not mentioned within the compound; e.g.,
pickpocket represents
a
kind of person, not a kind of pocket nor a kind of pick.
free
morpheme
:
a morpheme that need not be attached to another mor-
pheme, but can constitute a word on its own.
head
: the
main constituent of a compound, which may be modified by the
compound’s other constituents.
inflectional
morpheme
: a bound morpheme
that signals a grammatical
function and meaning in a specific sentence, e.g., plural {-s},
past tense
{-ed}, comparative {-er}, superlative {-est}.
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