Degrees of Decomposability of -ism Nouns and Their Sanctioning Construction Schemas
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.35360/njes.515Keywords:
noun, nominalization, derivation, suffix(ation), -ism, construction schema, (de) composability, sanction, sanctions, (sur)namismAbstract
This article scrutinizes nouns with the suffix -ism derived from a homogeneous category of derivational bases. The influence of extralinguistic factors on the interpretation of -ism nouns is undeniable. Relevant examples of pragmatic motivation are presented and briefly discussed. However, it is argued here that the derivational process in question can be largely reduced thanks to local construction schemas of a dual—phonological and semantic—nature. Such templates grasp enough semantic nuance in a fairly straightforward way. The results are used to demonstrate that numerous novel and low-frequency -ism formations are sanctioned by construction schemas at different levels of specificity. Such schemas are readily available for other, analogical formations, without any need for superfluous specification of semantic and formal detail. The argument is made for the need to simplify sanctioning word-formation templates for certain types of suffixal patterns (abbreviated here to namisms and surnamisms). Three degrees of decomposability of -ism nouns and their sanctioning schemas are postulated. The observations made shed some light on our understanding of the production and subsequent use of -ism nouns.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2023 Piotr Twardzisz
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Authors of content published in NJES remain the copyright holders.