Productivity patterns of derivational and inflectional adaptation of new borrowings

The paper analyses affixation of new borrowings in Lithuanian and the process of their integration into the system of Lithuanian morphological paradigms applying the framework of Natural Morphology. Two word classes, nouns and adjectives, have been analysed and productivity patterns of the new lexi...

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Main Authors: Loreta Vaicekauskienė, Ineta Dabašinskienė, Laura Kamandulytė-Merfeldienė
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Vilnius University Press 2014-03-01
Series:Taikomoji kalbotyra
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.journals.vu.lt/taikomojikalbotyra/article/view/17473
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spelling doaj-0ad5e0fb28624d078593ef110aacb9972020-11-25T03:41:19ZdeuVilnius University PressTaikomoji kalbotyra2029-89352014-03-01310.15388/TK.2014.17473Productivity patterns of derivational and inflectional adaptation of new borrowingsLoreta Vaicekauskienė0Ineta Dabašinskienė1Laura Kamandulytė-Merfeldienė2Institute of Lithuanian Language, LithuaniaVytautas Magnus University, LithuaniaVytautas Magnus University, Lithuania The paper analyses affixation of new borrowings in Lithuanian and the process of their integration into the system of Lithuanian morphological paradigms applying the framework of Natural Morphology. Two word classes, nouns and adjectives, have been analysed and productivity patterns of the new lexicon are presented and discussed. To the group of new borrowings are assigned those items that have been accepted into Lithuanian since 1990 or those that have not been included into the “Dictionary of International Words” (1985). The corpus of data used for the present analysis is compiled from the material found in the Database of New Borrowings, which provides information about borrowing into Lithuanian in written public texts of the last two decades, and the Corpus of Spoken Lithuanian (2006–2009). It has been found that the new borrowings follow the inflectional and derivational rules of the most productive morphological paradigms of Lithuanian. The most productive inflectional class of the borrowed nouns is -as, less productive is -is (-io), and the least productive is -a. As for the suffixes, the most productive are -imas (signalling abstract nouns), -ininkas (naming of persons), and the feminine derivational form -inė (from the masculine form –inis) for naming of instrument/ location. The newly borrowed adjectives, as a rule, are only rarely integrated into Lithuanian vocabulary by just adding the Lithuanian inflectional endings, they are mainly integrated using a suffix. In the adjective group the most productive suffix is -inis, while the least productive is -iškas. The research of new borrowings as either inflectional or derivational. This is due to the fact that the derivational relationship between the base and the derived forms in the case of new borrowing is difficult to identify and to prove. https://www.journals.vu.lt/taikomojikalbotyra/article/view/17473new borrowingsnatural morphologyinflexionword formationproductivity
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Loreta Vaicekauskienė
Ineta Dabašinskienė
Laura Kamandulytė-Merfeldienė
spellingShingle Loreta Vaicekauskienė
Ineta Dabašinskienė
Laura Kamandulytė-Merfeldienė
Productivity patterns of derivational and inflectional adaptation of new borrowings
Taikomoji kalbotyra
new borrowings
natural morphology
inflexion
word formation
productivity
author_facet Loreta Vaicekauskienė
Ineta Dabašinskienė
Laura Kamandulytė-Merfeldienė
author_sort Loreta Vaicekauskienė
title Productivity patterns of derivational and inflectional adaptation of new borrowings
title_short Productivity patterns of derivational and inflectional adaptation of new borrowings
title_full Productivity patterns of derivational and inflectional adaptation of new borrowings
title_fullStr Productivity patterns of derivational and inflectional adaptation of new borrowings
title_full_unstemmed Productivity patterns of derivational and inflectional adaptation of new borrowings
title_sort productivity patterns of derivational and inflectional adaptation of new borrowings
publisher Vilnius University Press
series Taikomoji kalbotyra
issn 2029-8935
publishDate 2014-03-01
description The paper analyses affixation of new borrowings in Lithuanian and the process of their integration into the system of Lithuanian morphological paradigms applying the framework of Natural Morphology. Two word classes, nouns and adjectives, have been analysed and productivity patterns of the new lexicon are presented and discussed. To the group of new borrowings are assigned those items that have been accepted into Lithuanian since 1990 or those that have not been included into the “Dictionary of International Words” (1985). The corpus of data used for the present analysis is compiled from the material found in the Database of New Borrowings, which provides information about borrowing into Lithuanian in written public texts of the last two decades, and the Corpus of Spoken Lithuanian (2006–2009). It has been found that the new borrowings follow the inflectional and derivational rules of the most productive morphological paradigms of Lithuanian. The most productive inflectional class of the borrowed nouns is -as, less productive is -is (-io), and the least productive is -a. As for the suffixes, the most productive are -imas (signalling abstract nouns), -ininkas (naming of persons), and the feminine derivational form -inė (from the masculine form –inis) for naming of instrument/ location. The newly borrowed adjectives, as a rule, are only rarely integrated into Lithuanian vocabulary by just adding the Lithuanian inflectional endings, they are mainly integrated using a suffix. In the adjective group the most productive suffix is -inis, while the least productive is -iškas. The research of new borrowings as either inflectional or derivational. This is due to the fact that the derivational relationship between the base and the derived forms in the case of new borrowing is difficult to identify and to prove.
topic new borrowings
natural morphology
inflexion
word formation
productivity
url https://www.journals.vu.lt/taikomojikalbotyra/article/view/17473
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