Lexicology
Lexical set
1) a group of words more or less corresponding in their main semantic component, i. e. belonging to the same semantic field 2) a group of words having the same generic meaning
Sociolingustics
A branch of linguistics concerned with the problems of social nature of language. It studies the relations between language and society
Synchrony
A conventional isolation of a certain stage in the development of language as the object of linguistic investigation
Barbarism
A foreign word or expression used in some social groups instead of native words as a fashion
Phonological neologism
A new word comprised of separate phonemes (like acronyms or onomatopoeia) Луи Гилберт
Word combination
A non-predicative unit of speech which is, semantic ally, both global and articulate. It is produced, not reproduced, in speech
Idiom proper
A phraseological unit with pronounced stylistic characteristics owing to which an element of play is introduced into speech.
Morhological neologism
A result of a word-building process which is based on the patterns and morphemes existing in the language
Language
A semiological system of a special type serving as the main means of human communication
Cliche
A stereotyped expression mechanically reproduced in speech and due to it has lost its freshness and its ability to express thought exactly
Word-forming pattern
A structural and semantic formula, displaying a sequence of elements which is regularly reproduced in speech
Allolex
A word as a member of speech, a variant of a lexeme in a given utterance
Phraseological unit
A word combination in which semantic unity (non-separability) prevails over structural separability (or in which global nomination is expressed in a combination of different units)
Hybrid
A word different element of which are of etymologically different origin
Occasional word
A word formed after existing patterns as an individual innovation for a special occasion but not in current use
Lexeme
A word in all its meanings and forms, i. e. a word as a structural element of language (invariant)
Neologism
A word or a word combination that is specially coined to name a new object or express a new concept
Archaism
A word or an expression out of use but still understood by the speakers of the language (очи, чело)
Euphemism
A word or expression which refers to the taboo topic in a vague or indirect way
Term
A word or word combination of a special (technical, scientific) language used for definition of specific objects and concepts. Usually monosemantic
Historism
A word that got out of use bc the object it denotes dissappeared from modern life (батоги)
Obsolete word
A word that is out of use at present but is recognized by the speakers of the language
Semantic extention
A) the extention of the semantic capacity of a word (the development of polysemy) b) widening of meaning
Context
A) the linguistic environment of a unit of language which reveals the conditions and the characteristic features of its usage in speech b) the semantically complete passage of written speech sufficient to establish the meaning of a given word (phrase)
Narrowing of meaning
A) the restriction of the semantic capacity of a word in the course of its historical development b) the shrinking of meaning
Jargon
A) the technical vocabulary or idiom of special activity or group b) obscure and often pretentious language marked by a roundabout way of expression and use of long word
Antonyms
A) words which have in their meaning a qualitative feature and can therefore be regarded as semantically opposite b) words contrasted as correlated pairs
Derivational morpheme
An affixal morpheme which, when added to the stem modifies the lexical meaning of the root and forms a new word
Paradigmatics
Associative (non-simultaneous) relationship of words in language as distinct from linear (simultaneous) relationship of words in speech (syntagmatics)
Loan translation (calques)
Borrowing by means of literally translating words or word-combinations by modeling theirs foreign patterns
Parts of speech
Classes of words according to their a) general categoric meaning b) system of grammatical categories c) specific syntactic functions d) special types (patterns) of form-building and word-formation
Conversion
Derivation without affixation. A special type of derivation where the word-forming means is the paradigm of the word itself
Homographs
Different words coinciding in their orthographic expression
Main nominative meaning of a word
Direct meaning of a word, immediately referring to objects, phenomena, actions, and qualities in extralinguistic reality (referent)
Polysemy
Diversity of meanings; the existence within one word of several connected meanings as the result of the development and changes of its original meaning.
Back-formation
Forming the allegedly allegedly [ ə ' l e d ʒ ɪ d l ɪ ]вроде бы, по всей вероятности, original stem from a supposed derivative on the analogy of the existing pairs, i. e. the singling-out of a stem from a word which is wrongly regarded as a derivative
Lexical morpheme
Generalized term for root and derivational morphemes, as expressing lexical meanings in contrast to flexional morphemes that express grammatical meanings
Idiomatic
Having the qualities of a phraseological unit, i. e.the globality of meaning which is not deducible from the meanings of the components
Slang
Language of a highly colloquial type, below the level of educated standard speech and consisting either of new words or of current words employed in some special sense
Politically correct language
Language that is based on the idea of multiculturalism and excludes all biased styles of language, like words marked with gender (suffix ess, morpheme man)
Colligation
Morphosyntactically conditioned combinability of words as a means of realization of their polysemy
Etymological doublet
One of a pair of(or more) words borrowed from the same language (origin of borrowing) at different times
Nominative-derivative meaning
Other meanings in a polysemantic word which are characterized by free combinability and are connected with the main nominative meaning
Semantic field
Part of reality singled out in human experience and theoretically covered in language by a more or less autonomous lexical microsystem
Enantiosemy
Polarization of meaning, the ability of a word (a morpheme, etc) to express opposite meanings (bad to say good)
Reproducibility
Regular use in speech ready-made (a condition sine qua non of a word as a linguistic unit)
Synchronic
Representing one historical stage in the development of language
Borrowing
Resorting to the word-stock of other languages for words to express new concepts, name new objects, phenomena etc
Multiculturalism
Social and political movement which assumes real equality of cultures and considers it a necessity to include the achievements of all ethnical, sexual and other minorities into social and cultural life and educational programmes. Opposite - eurocentrism
Collocation
Such a combination of words which conditions the realization or a certain meaning
Connotation
Supplementary semantic and/or stylistic shade added to the word's main meaning and expressing additional emotional, expressive and evalutive overtones
Morphological segmentation
The ability of a word to be divided into such elements as root, stem and affixes
Productivity
The ability of being used to form new words which are readily understood by the speakers of a language
Speech
The activity of man using language to communicate with other people (the use of linguistic means to convey certain content)
Word
The basic unit of language. It corresponds to the thing meant and names it
Semasiology
The branch of linguistics which studies the semantics of linguistic units
Semantic neologism
The change in the meaning of a word without changes in its form or paradigm
Word changing
The changing of a word form according to its paradigm
Homonymy
The coincidence in the same sound form and the orthographic complex of two or more different linguistic units
Monosemy
The existence of only one meaning within one word
Denotation
The expression of the main meaning, meaning proper of a linguistic unit in contrast to its connotation
Context of situation
The extralinguistic situation which enables to understand the meaning of a word or phrase
Diachrony
The historical development of the system of language as the object of linguistic investigation
Source of borrowing
The language from which the borrowing came into English
Sociolect
The language of a social and/or professional group
Origin of borrowing
The language to which the word may be traced
Vocabulary
The lexical corpus of language. All the words of a language as distinct from sounds, grammar and other aspects of linguistic investigation
Semantic isolation
The loss by a word, or word combination, of productivity and the acquisition of idiomatic qualities
Lexical meaning
The material meaning of a word as distinct from its formal, grammatical meaning, which reflects the concept the word expresses
Grammatical meaning
The meaning of the formal membership of a word in the grammatical system of a language (is expressed in the word's form)
Semantics
The meaning of words, expressions or grammatical forms
Stem
The part of a word which remains unchanged throughout it's paradigm and to which grammatical affixes and inflections are added
Clipping
The process and the result of curtailing off сокращения a word to one or two, usually initial, syllables
Abbreviation
The process and the result of forming a word out of the initial elements (letters, syllables, or morphemes) of a word combination
Word-formation(word-building)
The process of forming words according to certain patterns specific for the language.
Blending(contamination)
The process of fusing two words, often with a letter or syllable in common. The result is called a blend, portmanteau word, contamination
Meaning
The reverberation in the human consciousness of an object of extralinguistic reality (a phenomenon, a relationship, a quality, a process) which becomes a fact of language bc of its constant indissoluble association with a definite linguistic expression
Root
The semantic nucleus of a word which doesn't express any grammatical properties
Morpheme
The smallest (ultimate) recurrent unit of language directly related to meaning
Neology
The study of the structure, meaning and word-building patterns of neologisms
Terminology
The sum total of terms for a specific branch of science, technology, industry, etc, forming a special layer in the word-stock of a language
Paradigm
The system of grammatical forms of a word
Biased language
The use of words that stereotypes individuals, inappropriately assigning physical or behavioral characteristics to members of a particular group, usually a minority (sexist language, call attention to gender)
Deformation of idiom
The violation of semantic integrity (нарушение целостности) of a phraseological unit or idiom proper by actualizing the potential meanings of its elements or destruction of its form
Synonyms
Two or more words of the same lge belonging to the same part of speech and possessing at least one identical or nearly identical denotational meanings, interchangeable in some contexts, without any considerable alteration denotational meaning, but different in morphemic composition, phonemic shape and connotations
Derivation
Word-formation through combining a stem and affixes
Composition
Word-formation through combining two or more stems (or roots)
Borrowings
Words borrowed into a language in their phonetic form (intifada from Arabic rebellion, kung fu from Mandarin martial art)
Paronyms
Words which by virtue of partial homonymy may be either erroneuously or for stylistic purposes be used one instead of the other in speech
Homophones
Words with different meanings but the same sound form
Onomatopoeia onomatopoeia [ ɒ n ə m eə t ə ' p i : ə ]
Ономатопия, звукоподражание formation of words from sounds that resemble those associated with the object or action to be named, or that seem suggestive of its qualities