The lexicon of Modern Chinese is characterised by a preponderance of multi-morphemic words, which are typically built from lexical morphemes, either bound or free. Compounding, broadly understood as the combination of two or more lexical morphemes, is by far the most common word formation device in the modern language. While drawing a sharp boundary between compounding and derivation for Chinese has proven difficult, there are indeed a number of items which possess derivation-like features, including bound status, fixed posi-tion, and a stable, often bleached meaning. Moreover, bound items, sometimes without morphemic status, may acquire the meaning of a word as part of a con-struction, and generate new words and constructions with that acquired meaning. In this chapter, we will apply the principles of CxM to the analysis of Chinese complex words, showing how a constructional approach may best explain several phenomena which are characteristic of Chinese word formation, including the genesis of new meanings for lexical morphemes as part of word formation sche-mas, rather than in isolation. Also, we will show that the parameter of headed-ness in compounding may not be set for the language as a whole, but is rather specified in schemas.

The Construction Morphology analysis of Chinese word formation

Arcodia, Giorgio F.
Writing – Original Draft Preparation
;
BASCIANO, Bianca
Writing – Original Draft Preparation
2018-01-01

Abstract

The lexicon of Modern Chinese is characterised by a preponderance of multi-morphemic words, which are typically built from lexical morphemes, either bound or free. Compounding, broadly understood as the combination of two or more lexical morphemes, is by far the most common word formation device in the modern language. While drawing a sharp boundary between compounding and derivation for Chinese has proven difficult, there are indeed a number of items which possess derivation-like features, including bound status, fixed posi-tion, and a stable, often bleached meaning. Moreover, bound items, sometimes without morphemic status, may acquire the meaning of a word as part of a con-struction, and generate new words and constructions with that acquired meaning. In this chapter, we will apply the principles of CxM to the analysis of Chinese complex words, showing how a constructional approach may best explain several phenomena which are characteristic of Chinese word formation, including the genesis of new meanings for lexical morphemes as part of word formation sche-mas, rather than in isolation. Also, we will show that the parameter of headed-ness in compounding may not be set for the language as a whole, but is rather specified in schemas.
2018
The Construction of Words. Advances in Construction Morphology
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10278/3685920
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