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Grammar Terms

Miscellaneous Technical Terms
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Affix, Antecedent, Antonym, Cognate, Correlative, Ending, False Friends, Germanic Languages, Homonym, Inflection, Part of Speech, Prefix, Romance Languages, Root & Stem, Stem, Suffix, Synonym

Affix

An affix is small word element that cannot occur independently, but only attached to a root or stem. Affixes are classified (1) by their position (prefix, suffix/ending, or in some languages infix) or (2) in some languages by the category of function they perform (e.g., agglutinative affix or grammatical affix).

Antecedent

An antecedent is the word or phrase to which a pronoun refers, e.g., “George is the man who came yesterday.” George is the antecedent of “who.” Outside of linguistics, it can mean simply that something came earlier: “the antecedent political situation.”

Cognate

Cognate means having a common ancestor. For example, Spanish tomato and French tomate are cognate words, both borrowed from Nahuatl tomatl, the Spanish directly, the French indirectly (via Spanish). More broadly, Spanish and French are cognate languages, both descended (principally) from Latin. Cognate languages are sometimes called “sister” languages. Cognatation is a matter of historical fact. But cognate words evolve with the remainder of their languages and hence do not necessarily have the same meanings. For example, English “barbarian” (an uncivilized person), is cognate with ancient Greek barbaros, which referred to anyone who didn’t speak Greek. So is Sanskrit yavana, but the Sanskrit word referred to anyone who didn’t speak Sanskrit.

Correlative

A correlative —the term is used only in Esperanto linguistics— is any word in a series of function words that can be arranged in a more or less regular table like the following one. (American linguists sometimes speak collectively of English “WH words.”) Although this English table is not as well developed as the correlative table of Esperanto, it is clear that there are regularities, even if some cells are blank. Similar tables could be constructed for other languages.

Person Thing Time Place Manner Means
Who What/Which When Where Why/​Wherefore How/​Wherewith
(That person) That Then There (Because) (Thus)
Nobody Nothing Never Nowhere “Nohow” (By no means)
Somebody Something Sometimes Somewhere Somehow (In some way)
Anybody Anything Any time Anywhere (Any way) Anyhow
Everybody Everything (Always) Everywhere (Every way) (By every means)

For correlatives in Esperanto, click here.

Ending

See affix.

False Friends

False friends are foreign words that a language learner finds familiar but misunderstands, usually because of structural similarity to words in a language already studied but a semantic difference. In some cases, these are false cognates: words that seem to be cognate but are not. However they can also be words whose meaning has changed substantially in one or both languages to the point that their shared historical roots are misleading. An example would be English “attend,” which (almost) never carries the old Latin meaning of “await” that it routinely carries in Romance languages.

Obs.: The enormous vocabulary that English has inherited from Latin, often through French, has evolved further from its Latin cognates than has been the case with the Romance languages, so English exhibits an especially large number of “false friends” to trip up both English speakers studying other languages and foreign speakers studying English.


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Germanic Languages

Germanic languages are those descended from Proto-Germanic,a language of Scandinavia in the Iron Age. They include English and German, but also others rarely taught in American universities, such as Norwegian, Danish, Icelandic, Swedish, and Dutch, as well as extinct languages such as Gothic and Vandalic.

Obs.: Due to the French conquest in 1066, English has an enormous vocabulary imported from French and other Romance languages. It is in this and several other respects the Germanic language least like the others in this family.

Homonyms, Synonyms, Antonyms, & and Merisms

Two or more words are said to be homonyms if they have the same pronunciation (and often the same spelling) but different meanings; for example: The bank of a river as opposed to the bank where money is kept. Two or more words are said to be synonyms if they have roughly the same meaning; for example: Sleeplessness and insomnia. Two words are considered to be antonyms if their meanings are opposites; for example: wet and dry, high and low, good and bad.

Obs.: It is a common rhetorical device in many languages to express a range by a pair of antonyms. For example, “They all came, young and old alike” means from young through old. The Chinese poetic expression cǎomù 草木 (“grass-tree”) means all plants, but is a compound referring to both small and large ones. In Biblical book of Genesis the famous “tree of the knowledge of good and evil” was probably the tree of the knowledge of everything, from good to evil (not of the boundary between what is good and what is evil). Such a turn of phrase, using antonyms as the endpoints of a range, is called a merism.
Obs.: Perfect synonyms are rare and seem to be historically unstable. Where there are two words, it seems irresistible to find or make a distinction between them; it is tempting but simplistic to suspect that this grows from the need to choose between them.

Inflection

Inflection refers to three things: (1) The process or effect of showing grammatical relationships by making changes in the form of words, usually by using grammatical affixes. Examples are conjugation and declension. See affix. (2) Any such distinctive modification itself. (3) The cadence and pitch pattern of an utterance.

Part of Speech

Parts of speech are generic categories of words, based on their functions. Examples are nouns, verbs and prepositions..

Prefix

See affix.

Romance Languages

Romance languages are those descended from Latin. They include Spanish, French, and Italian, as well as others rarely taught in American universities, such as Portuguese, Romanian, and Catalán.

Root & Stem

A root or stem is the main part of a word which carries the core meaning and to which affixes (prefixes and suffixes) may be added. For some languages it is useful to differentiate between a root, as the base form, and a stem, which also includes any non-grammatical affixes (i.e., “agglutinative” or “derivational” affixes) and to which grammatical affixes are yet to be attached. For example, “rewrites” consists of an agglutinative prefix (“re-“) plus a root (“write”), making a stem (“rewrite-“), plus a grammatical suffix (“‑s”) to form the whole word.

Obs.: For English most people use “root” and “stem” interchangeably. For some languages (Turkish, Hungarian, Esperanto) the distinction is especially useful.

Stem

See root & stem..

Suffix

See affix.


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