of examples which apparently contradict this, for example a
paperback is
not a kind of
back, but a book with paper covers. Such examples, where
neither the head of the compound nor the modifier is the referent of the
compound, are called
bahuvrihi compounds, a term originating with the
Sanskrit grammarians of ancient India. Bahuvrihi compounds are at least
as common in Old English as today.
Let us now move on to Old English compounds themselves. The
most common examples involve noun+noun compounds, such as
bo¯ccræft
‘book-craft’ = ‘literature’ and
wı¯fmann ‘woman’. The latter example
serves to show why the compound is masculine in gender, because it
is the head noun, here
mann, which determines the gender of the
compound noun. Sometimes the first noun is in the genitive case, as in
Dostları ilə paylaş: