formans

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

English

Etymology

Borrowed from German Formans, from Latin elementum fōrmāns (forming element), with fōrmāns being the present participle of fōrmō (to shape; to form; to fashion). Doublet of formant.

Noun

formans (plural formantia)

  1. (linguistic morphology) Synonym of formative (language unit, typically a morph, that has a morphological function).
    • 1968, Karl H. Menges, The Turkic Languages and Peoples, page 157:
      These facts then clearly evidence such elements as enclitical particles which exercise certain morphological and/or syntactical functions, but which have not yet developed into actual suffixes obliged to conform to sound-harmony and the general accentuation pattern. Some elements of this type are the formantia of the cas. compar. in -däg, and the cas. aequat. (prosecut., mensurat., terminat.) in -ča/-čä in the nominal category, and the formans of the negative aspect in -ma-/-mä- in the verbal category.
    • 2006, Kim McCone, The Origins and Development of the Insular Celtic Verbal Complex, page 136:
      In Cowgill’s [] convincing opinion the basic formans of this PIE mediopassive was an -o(-) originally added to endings identical with those of the perfect (minus -e where applicable; []), which only had a single set of endings undifferentiated as to active/middle in PIE.
    • 2011, Joachim Grzega, “Compounding from an Onomasiological Perspective” (chapter 11), in The Oxford Handbook of Compounding, page 221:
      After the selection of an onomasiological base and an onomasiological mark on the semantic level of the word-formation process, the speaker selects a word-formation base and a formans from an inventory of productive word-formation categories, classes, and subtypes on the formal level.

Translations

French

Etymology

Borrowed from German Formans. Doublet of formant.

Pronunciation

Noun

formans m (plural formans)

  1. (linguistic morphology) Synonym of formant (formative; language unit, typically a morph, that has a morphological function)

Latin

Etymology

Present participle of fōrmō.

Participle

fōrmāns (genitive fōrmantis); third-declension one-termination participle

  1. shaping, forming, fashioning

Declension

Third-declension participle.

1When used purely as an adjective.

Descendants

  • German: Formans
    • English: formans
    • French: formans

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