
Heterogeneity in Word-Formation Patterns
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Content
- Heterogeneity in Word-Formation Patterns
- Editorial page
- Title page
- LCC data
- Table of contents
- Acknowledgments
- List of tables and figures
- List of abbreviations
- 1. Introduction
- 1.1 Theoretical and methodological approaches in this study
- 1.2 Outline of chapters
- 1.3 Aims and scope of this study: Wider implications
- 2. Phonological, syntactic and semantic constraints
- A note on the data cited from the corpus material
- 2.1 Phonological limitations to -ee verb derivation
- 2.2 Syntactic limitations of -ee as a verb derivation
- 2.3 Semantic explanations: -ee formation in a thematic role framework
- 2.4 Conclusion: Heterogeneity, polysemy and ambiguity revisited
- 3. The career of -ee words
- 3.1 Towards a contextualized history of -ee suffixation
- 3.2 Anglicized Law French beginnings
- 3.3 English indirect object formations in the sixteenth century
- 3.4 Growing diversity in the seventeenth century
- 3.5 Recession and continuations in the eighteenth century
- 3.6 Abundance in the nineteenth century: -ee words go popular
- 3.7 Changes across the centuries: Simultaneity and ambiguity
- 4. Morphology and the lexicon
- 4.1 Word-formation between morphology and the lexicon
- 4.2 Productivity and creativity in word-formation
- 4.3 Types of productivity: Synchronic and diachronic processes
- 4.4 Productive patterns and features of twentieth-century -ee words
- 4.5 Among the new words: Nonce words, neologisms and processes of establishment
- 4.6 Actual words and possible words: Towards an empirical study
- 5. A corpus-based analysis
- 5.1 Web data for linguistic purposes: Searching corpora and searching the Web
- 5.2 Searching the Web for -ee words: On methods and procedures
- 5.3 Syntactic and semantic patterns of successful neologisms
- 5.4 On 'failees': Ineffective patterns of -ee words
- 5.5 Hapax Legomena and their production in various text types
- 5.6 New productivity? On data collection and productivity measurement
- 6. -ee words in varieties of English
- 6.1 Suffixation with -ee in American English: A comparison of historical and contemporary usages
- 6.2 Australian English usage: On hypocoristics and -ee words
- 6.3 A corpus-based analysis of some new -ee words in American, British, Australian, New Zealand and Indian Englishes
- 6.4 Global meets local: Variation and change of -ee word production in varieties of English
- Conclusion
- Works cited
- Appendix 1
- Appendix 2
- Name index
- Subject index
- The Studies in Language Companion Series
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