Univerbation

Method of word formation From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In linguistics, univerbation is the diachronic process of combining a fixed expression of several words into a new single word.[1]

The univerbating process is epitomized in Talmy Givón's aphorism that "today's morphology is yesterday's syntax".[2]

Examples

Some univerbated examples are always (from all [the] way; the s was added later), onto (from on to), albeit (from all be it), and colloquial gonna (from going to) and finna (from fixin' to).

Although a univerbated product is normally written as a single word, occasionally it remains orthographically disconnected. For example, bon marché (French, lit.'good deal') acts like a single adjectival word that means 'cheap', the opposite of which is cher ('costly') as opposed to [un] mauvais marché ('a bad deal').

Similar phenomena

It may be contrasted with compounding (composition).[3] Because compound words do not always originate from fixed phrases that already exist, compounding may be termed a "coercive" or "forced" process. Univerbation, on the other hand, is considered a "spontaneous" process.[4]

It differs from agglutination in that agglutination is not limited to the word level.[3]

Crasis (merging of adjacent vowels) is one way in which words are univerbated in some languages.[citation needed]

See also

References

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