Variation and Change in the Lexicon A Corpus-Based Analysis of Adjectives in English Ending In -<i>ic</i>and -<i>ical</i> |
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Author:
| Kaunisto, Mark |
Series title: | Language and Computers |
ISBN: | 978-90-420-2233-1 |
Publication Date: | Jan 2007 |
Publisher: | Rodopi
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Book Format: | Hardback |
List Price: | AUD $130.95 |
Book Description:
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The present volume is a corpus-based study of the occurrence, variation, and change in the use of English adjective pairs in -
icand -
icalover several centuries. The study involves the analysis of large, multi-million-word corpora representing the English language at various stages. It examines the nature of competition between the two affixes: what kind of rivalry existed, what kinds of words entered into competition, and in what ways the rivalry was resolved. The book...
More DescriptionThe present volume is a corpus-based study of the occurrence, variation, and change in the use of English adjective pairs in -icand -icalover several centuries. The study involves the analysis of large, multi-million-word corpora representing the English language at various stages. It examines the nature of competition between the two affixes: what kind of rivalry existed, what kinds of words entered into competition, and in what ways the rivalry was resolved. The book presents close studies of six notably differentiated -ic/-icaladjective pairs, namely classic/classical, comic/comical, economic/economical, electric/electrical, historic/historical, and magic/magical, as well as commentaries on some 40 other -ic/-icalpairs, which manifest different types of shifts in use through history. It also includes critical discussion of general perceptions on and approaches to the practical use of corpora, stressing the importance of close and careful study of the materials under analysis. It further emphasises the value of consulting a variety of sources alongside corpora, including dictionaries and language usage manuals. This volume is of interest to language scholars in many fields, including corpus linguistics, diachronic linguistics, semantic change, lexicology, and word formation.