Les composés N-N de subordination : un paradigme émergent

This paper aims at examining the causes of the emergence of French subordinate Noun-Noun com-pounds. It is well known that the Noun-Noun pattern in French remains marginal compared to other lexicogenic processes, especially N-PREP-N or N-A, and it is supposed that its a...

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Main Author: Jan Radimský
Format: Article
Language:Catalan
Published: Adam Mickiewicz University 2019-03-01
Series:Studia Romanica Posnaniensia
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pressto.amu.edu.pl/index.php/srp/article/view/19049/18807
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spelling doaj-21201e57055a4815ba2e5d1fb010ff482021-08-02T17:14:51ZcatAdam Mickiewicz UniversityStudia Romanica Posnaniensia0137-24752084-41582019-03-0146316718010.14746/strop.2019.461.010Les composés N-N de subordination : un paradigme émergentJan Radimský 0Université de Bohême du Sud, České BudějoviceThis paper aims at examining the causes of the emergence of French subordinate Noun-Noun com-pounds. It is well known that the Noun-Noun pattern in French remains marginal compared to other lexicogenic processes, especially N-PREP-N or N-A, and it is supposed that its appearance as well as its progressive development took place during the last two centuries (19th-20th). The aim of this paper is to examine more in detail when and why French Noun-Noun structures emerge. As for the first question, empirical data from the Frantext corpus allow to hypothesize that both the type and the token frequency of French Noun-Noun compounds remain stable since the thirties of the nineteenth century until the end of the Second World War and that after this period, especially during the sixties, it begins to grow exponentially. Contrary to Arnaud’s estimate (2003, p. 141), no significant change in frequency or productivity was observed around the middle of the 19th century. As for the second question, the author claims that the emergence of subordinate N-N compounds was triggered by an increase in the productivity of the attributive N-N compounds, for which there is no competitive pattern in French. The theoretical rationale of this hypothesis is anchored in paradigmatic approaches to word formation, with specific reference to the formalization made according to the Construction Morphology framework (Booij, 2010).https://pressto.amu.edu.pl/index.php/srp/article/view/19049/18807noun-noun compoundsfrenchconstruction morphologyfrench compounds
collection DOAJ
language Catalan
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jan Radimský
spellingShingle Jan Radimský
Les composés N-N de subordination : un paradigme émergent
Studia Romanica Posnaniensia
noun-noun compounds
french
construction morphology
french compounds
author_facet Jan Radimský
author_sort Jan Radimský
title Les composés N-N de subordination : un paradigme émergent
title_short Les composés N-N de subordination : un paradigme émergent
title_full Les composés N-N de subordination : un paradigme émergent
title_fullStr Les composés N-N de subordination : un paradigme émergent
title_full_unstemmed Les composés N-N de subordination : un paradigme émergent
title_sort les composés n-n de subordination : un paradigme émergent
publisher Adam Mickiewicz University
series Studia Romanica Posnaniensia
issn 0137-2475
2084-4158
publishDate 2019-03-01
description This paper aims at examining the causes of the emergence of French subordinate Noun-Noun com-pounds. It is well known that the Noun-Noun pattern in French remains marginal compared to other lexicogenic processes, especially N-PREP-N or N-A, and it is supposed that its appearance as well as its progressive development took place during the last two centuries (19th-20th). The aim of this paper is to examine more in detail when and why French Noun-Noun structures emerge. As for the first question, empirical data from the Frantext corpus allow to hypothesize that both the type and the token frequency of French Noun-Noun compounds remain stable since the thirties of the nineteenth century until the end of the Second World War and that after this period, especially during the sixties, it begins to grow exponentially. Contrary to Arnaud’s estimate (2003, p. 141), no significant change in frequency or productivity was observed around the middle of the 19th century. As for the second question, the author claims that the emergence of subordinate N-N compounds was triggered by an increase in the productivity of the attributive N-N compounds, for which there is no competitive pattern in French. The theoretical rationale of this hypothesis is anchored in paradigmatic approaches to word formation, with specific reference to the formalization made according to the Construction Morphology framework (Booij, 2010).
topic noun-noun compounds
french
construction morphology
french compounds
url https://pressto.amu.edu.pl/index.php/srp/article/view/19049/18807
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