Конверсионное словообразование прилагательных цветообозначения. Методика преподавния в нач.классах
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In inflected languages the derivant and derivative usually have a characteristic nominal or verbal ending. But, ending are not derivative morphemes. When English was still a more amply inflected language, the present type existed, but inflectional differences were more in evidence.
Cf. the OE verbs besceopian, fugelian, gamenian, hearmian, freon
(freogian), dernian and their respective bases besceop, fugol, and the weakening of ending was little bearing on this subject. With regard to denominate derivation, however, it is interesting to note that the levelling of endings brought about the loss of distinction in ME between the OE conjugations. The -an of ryth-an as well as the -ian of loc-ian resulted in -en. This reducted the number of patterns for denominal verbs to one.
Derivation connection between verbs and nouns.
With respect to both denominal verbs (type loan verb f. loan
substantive) and deverbal substantives (type look substantive f look verb)
it can be seen that as early as Old English a derivational connection
existed between the present-infinitive stem of weak verb on the one hand
and the stem of nouns on the other. As for deverbal substantive, there was
some competition in the early stages of the language. Like other Germanic
languages, Old English had strong verbs that were connected with
substantives containing an ablaut vowel of the verb (ridan/rad, bindan/bend, beran/bora). However , this derivational type was unproductive
so far back as Old English. The present-infinitive stem of strong verbs
came to be felt to represent the derivative basis for deverbal substantives
in exactly the same way as did the corresponding stem of weak verbs: ride
verb/ride substantive=look verb/look substantive. But this contention of
Biese’s/4/ needs qualification: ‘these facts indicate the resistance should
by strong verbs to the process of converting them into nouns before, owing
to the introduction of weak inflections, a distinct idea of a universal
verb-stem had been developed’. Many of the verbs had weak forms that
derived substantives at an early date have either never had weak forms are
rare or later than the substantives. Verbs such as bite, fall, feel, fold, freeze, have, grind, hide make steal, tread are cases in point. This goes
to show that the existence of weak verb forms is incidental to the rise of
a derivational connection between the present infinitive stem of strong
verbs and the stem of substantive.
This derivational connection is partly due to class where a strong
verb and a substantive of the same root existed in OE and where phonetic
development resulted in closely resembling forms for both in ME. OE for, faru was fare by the end of the 12th century while the corresponding OE
verb faran had reached the stage of faren or fare about the same time.
Other examples of pairs are bidan ‘stay’/bid ‘delay, dwelling place’, bindan ‘bind’/bind ‘band, tie’, drincan ‘drink’/drinc, drinca ‘drink’, fleotan ‘float’/fleot ‘place, where water flows’, helpan ‘help’/help, hreowan ‘rue’/hreow ‘rue’, slepan ‘sleep’/sl p, slep ‘sleep’. The
derivational relation as it have been described them were fully established
around 200.
Zero-derivation as a «specifically English process».
It is usually assumed that the loss of ending gave rise to derivation
by a zero morpheme. Jespersen/7/ gives a somewhat to simplifying picture of
its rise and development . ‘As a great many native nouns and verbs
had...come be identical in form..., as the same things happened with
numerous originally French words..., it was quite natural that the speech-
instinct should take it as a matter of course that whenever the need of a
verb arose, it might be formed without any derivative ending from the
corresponding substantive’. He called the process ‘specifically English’.
As a matter of fact, derivation by a zero morpheme is neither specifically
English nor does it start, as Jespersen’s/7/ presentation would make it
appear when most ending had disappeared. Biese’s/4/ study shows quit
clearly that it began to develop on a larger scale at the beginning of the
13th century , i.e. at a time when final verbal -n had not yet been
dropped, when the plural ending of the present was not yet -en or zero, and
when the great influx of French loan words had not yet started. Bauer/2/
doesn’t think that the weakening of the inflectional system had anything to
do with the problem of zero derivation. Stems are immediate elements for
the speaker, who is aware of the syntagmatic character of an inflected
form. He therefor has no trouble in connecting verbal and nominal stems
provided they occur in sufficiently numerous pairs to establish a
derivational pattern. In Latin which is a highly inflected language, denominal verbs are numerous: corona/coronare, catena/catenare, lacrima/lacrimare; cumulus/cumulare, locus/locare, truncus/truncare, nomen, nomin-/nominare; sacer/sacrare. In Modern Spanish there are full sets of
verbal ending (though in the declension only gender and number are
expressed) both types of zero-derivation are very productive. The weakening
of the inflectional system in English, therefor , can’t have much to do
with development of zero-derivation.
On the other hand, it cannot be denied that despite the relative
productivity of corresponding derivational types in other languages, the
derivative range the English patterns, that of denominal verbs, is still
greater. The explanation of this seems to de that English, unlike Latin,
French, Spanish, or German, never had any competitive types. So, whenever
a derivation was made nouns, it followed the one pattern that existed, i.e.
derivation by zero morpheme. The only derivative morphemes PE has for
denominal verbs are -ate, -ize, -ify. They have restricted range of
derivative force: -ate is latinizing and leaned, -ify is learned while -ize
is chiefly technical. All three derive almost exclusively on a Latin
morphologic basis. The suffixal type dark-en was not originally a
deadjectival pattern; in any case, it would have to a certain extent
rivaled the type idle verb f. Idle adjective only. Derivation by a
morpheme, esp. The type loan verb f. Loan substantive, must therefore be
considered the norm and is quite naturally very strong in English. In
German, there are many competitive types. It is bath mutated and unmutated
verbs (faul-en, hart-en, draht-en, haut-en). There are also denominal verbs
with a derivative morpheme ( stein-ig-en, rein-ig-en; with a foreign
morpheme telefon-ier-en, lack-ier-en ). In addition, German makes use of
the prefixes be-, er-, ver-. Such types as ver-rohen, ver-jung-er, vergrosser-n; er-kalt-en, er-leichter-n; be-end-ig-en, be-herz-ig-en, ver-
eid-ig-en have no counterparts in English. English be- has never played a
serious role in denominal derivation. Nor has the type em-bed ever become
productive to any larger extent. The productivity of the type loan verb f.
Loan substantive seems to be thus reasonably for. The deverbal type look
substantive f. Look verb has been less prolific and is partly bound up with
certain syntactic patterns of grouping. For this, it is do had competitive
patterns. There are the suffixal types arriv-al, break-ade, guid-ance, improve-ment, organiz-ation and the verbal substantive type writ-ing though
the latter has now chiefly role of deriving action nouns proper. This is
the reason why so many zero-derivatives from verbs of Latin and French
origin, coined the 15th and 16th centuries, were subsequently replaced by
suffixal derivatives in -al, -age, -ance, ment. «After 1650 the suffix
formation have completely gained the upper hand of the direct conversion of
the disyllabic and trisyllabic words derived from French and Latin
verbs»(Biese/4/).
Zero-derivation with loan-words.
As for Latin and French words and derivation from, there are
comparatively few derivatives before (Biese/4/). French words were for some
time felt to be foreign elements and were not «converted» with the same
ease as native stems were. The phenomenon is in no way different from the
one it is observed with derivation by suffixes. Loan words remain strangers
for a time, and it usually takes time before a derivation type is applied
to a heterogeneous class of words. Zero - derivation was facilitated by the
eo-existence of borrowed substantives and verbs., as anchor substantive a
880 (=L) / anchor verb e 1230 (the OED has doubts, but F ancrer is recorded
in the 12th e., as Bloeh ). Account substantive 1260/verb 1303, change
substantive 1225/verb 1230, charge substantive 1225/verb 1297, cry
substantive 1275/verb 1225, dance substantive 1300/verb 1300, double
adjective 1225/verb 1290, doubt substantive 1225/verb 1225, poison
substantive 1230/verb 13.., rule substantive 1225/verb 1225.
There are quite a few verbs with French roods for which no French
verbs are recorded and which may accordingly be treated as zero
derivatives: feeble verb 1225/adjective 1175, hardy verb 1225/adjective
1225, master verb 1225/substantive a 1000, pool verb 1275/adjective 1200, saint verb 1225/substantive 1175. On the other hand, the substantive grant
1225 may be derived from the verb grant 1225. It is only after 1300 that
the process of zero-derivation is as firmly rooted with French as with
native words. Though French originals for later English words may occur, it
is just as safe to consider them as derivatives, as centre verb 1610 fr, centre substantive 1374, combat verb 1564 fr, combat substantive 1567 (or
the reverse), guard verb 1500 fr, guard substantive 1426 and others.
Words of Scandinavian origin were more easily incorporated than French
words, and derivation occurs as early as the 13th c.: trist «trust», boon
«ask as a boon, pray for», brod «shoot, sprout», smithy «make into a
smithy» a.o. (see Biese /4/).
The illustration of various types.
Type loan verb fr. loan substantive
(desubstantival verbs.)
Many PE verbs. go back to OE : answer (andsharu / andswarian), blossom
(blostm / blostnian), claw (clawu / clawian), fish (fisc / fiscian), fire
(fyr / fytian), harm (hearm / hearmian),wonder (wundor / wundrian), bill
«strike with the bill, peck», ground «bring to the ground», loan (1240), back (OE), butter (OE), experiment (ME), lamb (OE), night (OE), piece (ME), pit «cart into a pit»(OE), plank (ME), plate (ME), plow, plough (OE), plague (ME), priest (OE), promise (ME), prose (ME), ridge (OE), rivet (ME), rode (ME), root (EME), sack (OE), sauce «season» (ME), scale (ME), screen
(ME), shoulder (OE), side (OE), silver (OE), sponge (OE), spot (ME), story
(ME), streak (OE), summer (OE), table (ME), thong (OE), tin (OE), veil
(ME), winter (OE), all before 1500.
Angle «run into a corner» (ME), balance (ME), butcher (ME), cipher
(ME), cloister (ME), coffin (ME), collar (ME), colt «run wild as a colt»
(ME), cipher (ME), fancy (1465), fin (OE), gesture (ME), girdle (OE), glove
(OE), gossip (OE), grade (1511), husk (ME), kennel (ME), knob (ME), ladle
(OE), latch (ME), launder (ME), lecture (ME), libel (ME), mother (OE), neighbor (OE), place (ME), pole (ME), riddle «speak in riddles» (OE), shell
(OE), shop (ME), star (OE), stomach «be offended» (ME), sun (OE), vision
(ME), all 16th century blanket (ME), casket (1467), lamp (ME), leaf (OE), pilot (1530), race «run» (ME), soldier (ME), all 17th century Capture
(1541), diamond (ME), onion (ME), stocking (1583), tour (ME), all 18th
century Scrimmage (1470), shin (OE), signal (ME), torpedo (1520), vacation
(ME), wolf «eat like a wolf» (OE), 19th century, major 1927.
It would be difficult to give a complete list of derivatives as there
is an ever growing tendency verbs from substantives without derivative
morphemes. A few recent are service, contact (1929), audition, debut, package, chairman, page, date (1928), process (1945), waitress (1946), pressure (not in OED or Spl.), feature (rec., as in the play features).
Mencken/11/ gives many more, most of which are, however, hardly used.
It is likewise useless to try a classification to sense-groups, as
there is no class-denoting formative. The verb may denote almost any verbal
action connected with the basis of the underlying substantive. The verb bed
has or has had the meanings «spread a bed», «put to bed» (with various
implications), «go to bed», «sleep with», and there are more technical
meanings. Bladin/5/ had already pointed out that «every action or
occurrence can be designated by a verb derived from the very noun the idea
of which most easily enters the mind of the person wanting to state a
fact», and if Jespersen/7/ says that «it is difficult to give a general
definition of the sense-relation between substantive and de-substantival
verbs», this is rather an understatement. It may be recognized certain
groups, as «put in ...», «furnish, cover, affect ...», but it should be
noted that each of these senses is only one the many which the same verb
has or may have. Biese/4/, therefore, makes no attempt at classification, and he is certainly right in doing so. It may, however, be worthy of note
that the privative sense as in dust «remove the dust (from)» is frequent
only with technical terms denoting various kinds of dressing or cleaning.
Exs are bur wool or cotton, burl cloth, poll, pollard trees, bone, gut, scale fish.
The meaning of a certain verb is clear in a certain speech situation.
That brain means «smash the b.»,can «preserve in cans», winter «pass the
winter», is a result of given circumstances which establish the bridge of
understanding between the speaker and the person or persons spoken to.
There are derivatives from proper names, as boycott 1880 (orig. spelt
with a capital, from the name of Captain Boycott who was first boycotted),
Shanghay 1871 ‘drug and press on board a vessel’, Zeppelin 1916 ‘bomb from
a zeppelin’ (also clipped = zap).
Some verbs often occur in the -ing substantive only (originally or
chiefly), while finite verb forms or infinitives are not or rarely used, as
hornpiping ‘dancing a hornpipe’ (no verb rec.), slimming, orcharding
‘cultivation of fruit trees (no verb rec.). Dialling ‘the art of
construction dials’, speeching, electioneering, engineering, parlamenteering, volunteering are the original forms. Converted cpds with
-monger for a second-word are current only in the -ing form (merit-
mongering, money-mongering etc.). Innings are not matched by any other verb
form, nor are cocking ‘cock-fighting’, hopping ‘hop-picking’, moon-shining
‘illicit distilling’ and others.
Type idle verb fr. idle adjective. (deadjectival verbs).
To the OE period go back bitter, busy, cool, fair, fat, light, open, right, yellow (obs black, bright, dead, strong, old).
From the period between about 1150 and 1200 are recorded obs sick
‘suffer illness’, soft, low (obs meek, hory, hale). The following date
from the period between about 1200 and 1300 (Biese/4/ has included the
Cursor Mundi in this period): black, brown, loose, slight, better, blind
(obs hardly, certain, rich, wide, broad, less). From the 14th century are
recorded ready, clear, grey, sore, pale, full, dull, round, gentle,
English, tender, perfect (obs able, sound, weak, unable, honest, noble).
From the 15th century purple, stale, clean, from the 16th century shallow, slow, quiet, empty, bloody, idle, equal, dirty, parallel (and many other
now obs words, as Biese/4/ points out). The 17th century coined crimson, giddy, worst, blue, gallant, shy, tense, ridicule, unfit, ruddy (and many
how obs words. Biese/4/). From 18th century Are recorded net ‘gain as a net
sum’ 1758, total (once 1716, then 1859), negative, northern (said of
landscape), invalid ‘enter on the sick-list’, queer ‘cheat’ , from the
19th century desperate ‘drive desperate’, stubborn, sly ‘move in a
stealthy manner’, chirk ‘make cheerful’, gross ‘make a gross profit’
1884, southern (said of wind), aeriform, true. From our century there are
such words as pretty, wise, lethal, big.
Usually, deadjectival verbs denote change of state, and the meaning is
either ‘become ...’ or ‘make ...’. Intransitive verbs with meaning ‘be...’
(as idle, sly, equal) from quite a small group. Some verbs have a
comparative or superlative as root: better, best, worst, perhaps lower.
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