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Re: Linguistic term for ease of changing word-class (was: 'out-' affix in conlangs?)

From:Eric Christopherson <rakko@...>
Date:Sunday, August 10, 2008, 22:47
On Aug 10, 2008, at 2:22 PM, ROGER MILLS wrote:

> Eldin Raigmore wrote: >> >> BTW I once read a scholarly book by a true professional linguist >> on the ease of >> forming new words of one class from words of another class. I >> forget the title >> of the book and the name of the book's author (though I still have >> it -- >> somewhere -- ...) >
[...]
> William Safire, in his NYT column, likes to point out horrors like > "surveillance : to surveille" or "liaison : to liase", not quite in > the same category but close.
<Liase> is quite interesting, since <-on> isn't (AFAIK) a derivational affix in English, such that it could be removed from the word, the way that <-ance> is. I guess that's similar to <-aholic> from <alcoholic>. I am trying to think of other examples of that same thing happening, but they aren't coming to me. On the subject of <-on>, is it possible that words like <comparison> and <luncheon> helped it to be interpreted as a suffix? I know they're not pronounced the same (/an/ vs. /Is@n/ vs. /@n/), though. As for me, when I was very little I thought /@n/ was a nominal suffix of some sort, because of the words <spankin'> and <luncheon>. I don't know why I heard the noun <spankin'> more often than <spanking>, since my dialect doesn't change all /-N/ to /-n/. And it seems odd that I would have ever heard <luncheon> at all.
> Also, purists dislike "fínance" replacing the old distinction > finánce : fínance (not sure which is the verb/noun, though it was > drilled into me once upon a time :-(( ).
If it follows the general English pattern, <fínance> should be the noun and <finánce> the verb. This pattern seems to be eroding lately, at least with certain verbs.

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caeruleancentaur <caeruleancentaur@...>