Lexical and semantic change
Common collocation
A group of words that are commonly written or spoken together. For example, 'Once upon a time'.
Perjoration
The semantic meaning of the word becomes more negative.
Amelioration
The semantic meaning of the word becomes more positive.
Narrowing
The semantic meaning of the word loses some of its meaning/s.
Broadening
The semantic meaning of the word takes on more meanings.
Clipping
When a part of a word is shortened to produce a new word with the same meaning. For example, 'advertisement' becomes 'ad', 'examination' becomes 'exam'. These are examples of back clipping.
Blending
When two parts of a word are written or spoken together to form a new word. For example, glamping is an informal word/term but was formed through blending the words 'glam' and 'camping' together.
Compounding
When two words are placed together to create a new word or add to the semantic meaning. It is often marked by a hyphen. For example, 'country-house'.
Borrowing
Words borrowed or loaned from another language. For example, 'dekko' is borrowed from Hindi meaning 'look'.
Field specific lexis
Words that are associated with each other in the same piece of text but are also related to a specific topic. Often involves jargon. For example, 'computer', 'mouse', 'file', document'.
Lexical field / semantic field
Words that are associated with each other in the same piece of text. For example, 'fairytale', 'princess', 'prince'.
Antonym
Words that are typically opposite (antonyms) are semantically changing to mean the opposite of their definition. For example, 'wicked' used to mean bad but it now means good (it has a similar effect to the word 'awesome').
