2002 Fiscal Year Final Research Report Summary
A Research on the Notion of Lexicalization in Morphology
Project/Area Number |
13610591
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Research Category |
Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (C)
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Allocation Type | Single-year Grants |
Section | 一般 |
Research Field |
英語・英米文学
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Research Institution | Tsuda Collage |
Principal Investigator |
SHIMAMURA Reiko Tsuda Collage, Faculty of Literal Arts and Science, Professor, 学芸学部, 教授 (80015817)
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Project Period (FY) |
2001 – 2002
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Keywords | lexicalization / lexicalized phrase / word plus (W^+) / idiom / boundary between word and phrase / phrasal compound / decategorization |
Research Abstract |
The aim of this research is to clarify the notion of 'lexicalization' by considering the distinctions between words and phrases. In order to do so, I deal with two constructions. One is the combination of an adjective and a noun (A-N expression) occurring within a compound. I point out that in English and Dutch, not only A-N compounds (e.g. [blackboard] eraser) but semantically non-lexicalized A-N expressions (e.g. [small car] driver) are possible as non-head elements, while in Japanese and Chinese, only semantically lexicalized A-N compounds are possible, as in [kokuban] kesi ('blackboard eraser'). It should be noted that semantically transparent A-N expressions like [small car] driver obey the Lexical Integrity Principle, as seen from the unacceptability of the compound *[very small car] driver. I suggest that the category Word Plus (W^+), proposed in Kageyama 2001, be assigned to such A-N expressions. This category is defined as larger the Word (i.e.X^0) but nonetheless as a morphological category and not a syntactic category. The other constructions treated in this paper are prenominal expressions such as [after-the-party] mess, [clear-the-air] statement, [middle-of-the-road] figure. Such expressions should be defined as phrases reanalyzed as words (i.e.X^0), that is, lexicalized phrases, because they are fixed in form and comply with the Lexical Integrity Principle. I also argue that such expressions should be regarded as idioms because of the appearance of the articles the and a and decategorization (e.g.[after-party] mess and [middle-of-road] figure), both of which are typically observed in phrasal idioms like kick the bucket and lose (*the/ *a) face.
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Research Products
(8 results)