LINGUISTIC FEATURES OF COMPOUND WORDS IN ENGLISH

Авторы

  • Surayyo Nasriddinova Tashkent University for Applied Sciences

Аннотация

This article examines the linguistic features of compound words in English, with comparative reference to Uzbek. Word formation — understood as the systematic creation of new lexical units from existing linguistic material — is among the most dynamic processes in any living language, continuously enriching the lexicon. Among the various word-formation strategies, compounding occupies a particularly prominent position due to its productivity, structural transparency, and cross-linguistic prevalence. The article investigates how compound words are formed in English, reviews the major theoretical frameworks proposed by linguists, and discusses both structural and semantic dimensions of compounding. Special attention is given to the synchronic and diachronic perspectives on English word formation, as well as the growing influence of English compounding on other languages, including Uzbek.

Библиографические ссылки

1. Adams, W. (1973). An introduction to modern English word-formation. Longman.

2. Aitchison, J. (2008). The articulate mammal: An introduction to psycholinguistics (5th ed.). Routledge.

3. Antrushina, G. B., Afanasyeva, O. V., & Morozova, N. N. (1999). English lexicology. Drofa.

4. Arnold, I. V. (1986). The English word. Vysshaya Shkola.

5. Bauer, L. (1983). English word-formation. Cambridge University Press.

6. Campbell, L. (2013). Historical linguistics: An introduction (3rd ed.). Edinburgh University Press.

7. Carstairs-McCarthy, A. (2002). An introduction to English morphology: Words and their structure. Edinburgh University Press.

8. Ginzburg, R. S., Khidekel, S. S., Knyazeva, G. Y., & Sankin, A. A. (1979). A course in modern English lexicology. Vysshaya Shkola.

9. Greenbaum, S. (1996). The Oxford English grammar. Oxford University Press.

10. Han, Z., Guo, Y., & Sproat, R. (2001). Compound word segmentation using contextual information from a corpus. In Proceedings of the 39th Annual Meeting of the ACL (pp. 1–8). Association for Computational Linguistics.

11. Katamba, F. (1993). Morphology. Macmillan.

12. Lees, R. B. (1960). The grammar of English nominalizations. Indiana University Press.

13. Marchand, H. (1965). The categories and types of present-day English word-formation (2nd ed.). C. H. Beck.

14. Matthews, P. H. (1974). Morphology: An introduction to the theory of word-structure. Cambridge University Press.

15. Meshkov, O. D. (1985). Word formation in modern English. Nauka.

16. Miyazaki, M., Ohyama, Y., & Kurematsu, A. (1984). Compound word analysis using a handcrafted rule-based method. In Proceedings of COLING-84 (pp. 142–145). ACL.

17. Smirnitsky, A. I. (1956). Lexicology of the English language. Moscow State University Press.

18. Takeda, K., & Fujisaki, H. (1987). Segmentation of kanji compound words using a Markov model. In Proceedings of the 25th Annual Meeting of the ACL (pp. 210–215). ACL.

19. Ullmann, S. (1972). Semantics: An introduction to the science of meaning. Blackwell.

20. Saxena, P., Paul, S. Sentiment Analysis of Idioms Using Neural Network Models // Proceedings of the 2022 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing. – Abu Dhabi, 2022. – P. 1142–1156.

21. Fadaee, M., Bisazza, A., Monz, C. Examining the Challenges of Neural Machine Translation for Idiomatic Expressions // Computational Linguistics. – 2018. – Vol. 44, No. 3. – P. 451–482.

Загрузки

Опубликован

2026-04-19