Noun
1 the words that are spoken; "I listened to his
words very closely"
2 the text of a popular song or musical-comedy
number; "his compositions always started with the lyrics"; "he
wrote both words and music"; "the song uses colloquial language"
[syn: lyric, language]
3 language that is spoken or written; "he has a
gift for words"; "she put her thoughts into words"
4 an angry dispute; "they had a quarrel"; "they
had words" [syn: quarrel, wrangle, row, run-in, dustup]
5 words making up the dialogue of a play; "the
actor forgot his speech" [syn: actor's
line, speech]
English
Pronunciation
Noun
wordsTranslations
plural of "word", a part of a sentence
an angry discussion
- Dutch: woordenwisseling
Anagrams
A word is a unit of language that carries meaning
and consists of one or more morphemes which are linked more
or less tightly together, and has a phonetical value. Typically a
word will consist of a root
or stem
and zero or more affixes.
Words can be combined to create phrases, clauses, and sentences.
A word consisting of two or more stems joined together form a
compound.
A word combined with another word or part of a word form a portmanteau.
Etymology
English word is directly from Old English word, and has cognates in all branches of Germanic (Old High German wort, Old Norse orð, Gothic waurd), deriving from Proto-Germanic *wurđa, continuing a virtual PIE . Cognates outside Germanic include Baltic (Old Prussian wīrds "word", and with different ablaut Lithuanian var̃das "name", Latvian vàrds "word, name") and Latin verbum. The PIE stem is also found in Greek ερθει (φθεγγεται "speaks, utters" Hes. ). The PIE root is "say, speak" (also found in Greek ειρω, ρητωρ).The original meaning of word is "utterance, speech, verbal expression". Until
Early
Modern English, it could more specifically refer to a name or
title.
The technical meaning of "an element of speech"
first arises in discussion of grammar (particularly Latin
grammar), as in the prologue to Wyclif's Bible (ca.
1400):
- "This word autem, either vero, mai stonde for forsothe, either for but."
Definitions
Depending on the language, words can be difficult to identify or delimit. Dictionaries take upon themselves the task of categorizing a language's lexicon into lemmas. These can be taken as an indication of what constitutes a "word" in the opinion of the authors.Word boundaries
In spoken language, the distinction of individual words is usually given by rhythm or accent, but short words are often run together. See clitic for phonologically dependent words. Spoken French has some of the features of a polysynthetic language: il y est allé ("He went there") is pronounced /i.ljɛ.ta.le/. As the majority of the world's languages are not written, the scientific determination of word boundaries becomes important.There are five ways to determine where the word
boundaries of spoken language should be placed::A speaker is told
to repeat a given sentence slowly, allowing for pauses. The speaker
will tend to insert pauses at the word boundaries. However, this
method is not foolproof: the speaker could easily break up
polysyllabic words.:A speaker is told to say a sentence
out loud, and then is told to say the sentence again with extra
words added to it. Thus, I have lived in this village for ten years
might become I and my family have lived in this little village for
about ten or so years. These extra words will tend to be added in
the word boundaries of the original sentence. However, some
languages have infixes,
which are put inside a word. Similarly, some have separable
affixes; in the German
sentence "Ich komme gut zu Hause an," the verb ankommen is
separated.:This concept was proposed by Leonard
Bloomfield. Words are thought of as the smallest meaningful
unit of speech that can stand by themselves. This correlates
phonemes (units of sound) to lexemes (units of meaning).
However, some written words are not minimal free forms, as they
make no sense by themselves (for example, the and of).:Some
languages have particular rules of pronunciation that make it
easy to spot where a word boundary should be. For example, in a
language that regularly stresses
the last syllable of a word, a word boundary is likely to fall
after each stressed syllable. Another example can be seen in a
language that has vowel
harmony (like Turkish):
the vowels within a given word share the same quality, so a word
boundary is likely to occur whenever the vowel quality changes.
However, not all languages have such convenient phonetic rules, and
even those that do present the occasional exceptions.:Much like the
above mentioned minimal free forms, this method breaks down a
sentence into its smallest semantic units. However,
language often contains words that have little semantic value (and
often play a more grammatical role), or semantic units that are
compound words. As Plag suggests, the idea of a lexical item being
considered a word should also adjust to pragmatic criteria. The
word "hello", for example, does not exist outside of the realm of
greetings being difficult to assign a meaning out of it. This is a
little more complex if we consider "how do you do?": is it a word,
a phrase, or an idiom? In practice, linguists apply a mixture of
all these methods to determine the word boundaries of any given
sentence. Even with the careful application of these methods, the
exact definition of a word is often still very elusive.
There are some words that seem very general but
may truly have a technical definition, such as the word "soon,"
usually meaning within a week.
Orthography
In languages with a literary tradition, there is interrelation between orthography and the question of what is considered a single word. Word separators (typically space marks) are common in modern orthography of languages using alphabetic scripts, but these are (excepting isolated precedents) a modern development (see also history of writing).In English
orthography, words may contain spaces if they are compounds
or proper
nouns such as ice cream or air raid shelter.
Vietnamese
orthography, although using the Latin
alphabet, delimits monosyllabic morphemes, not words.
Conversely, synthetic
languages often combine many lexical morphemes into single
words, making it difficult to boil them down to the traditional
sense of words found more easily in analytic
languages; this is especially difficult for polysynthetic
languages such as Inuktitut and
Ubykh,
where entire sentences may consist of single such words.
Logographic
scripts use single signs (characters)
to express a word. Most de facto existing scripts are however
partly logographic, and combine logographic with phonetic signs.
The most widespread logographic script in modern use is the
Chinese
script. While the Chinese script has some true logographs, the
largest class of characters used in modern Chinese (some 90%) are
so-called pictophonetic compounds (, ). Characters of this sort are
composed of two parts: a pictograph, which suggests the general
meaning of the character, and a phonetic part, which is derived
from a character pronounced in the same way as the word the new
character represents. In this sense, the character for most Chinese
words consists of a determiner and a syllabogram, similar to the
approach used by cuneiform
script and Egyptian
hieroglyphs.
There is a tendency informed by orthography to
identify a single Chinese character as corresponding to a single
word in the Chinese language, parallel to the tendency to identify
the letters between two space marks as a single word in the English
language. In both cases, this leads to the identification of
compound members as
individual words, while e.g. in German
orthography, compound members are not separated by space marks
and the tendency is thus to identify the entire compound as a
single word. Compare e.g. English capital city with German
Hauptstadt and Chinese 首都 (lit. chief
metropolis):
all three are equivalent compounds, in the English case consisting
of "two words" separated by a space mark, in the German case
written as a "single word" without space mark, and in the Chinese
case consisting of two logographic characters.
Morphology
see Inflection In synthetic languages, a single word stem (for example, love) may have a number of different forms (for example, loves, loving, and loved). However, these are not usually considered to be different words, but different forms of the same word. In these languages, words may be considered to be constructed from a number of morphemes. In Indo-European languages in particular, the morphemes distinguished are Thus, the Proto-Indo-European would be analysed as consisting of- , the zero grade of the root
- a root-extension (diachronically a suffix), resulting in a complex root
- The thematic suffix
- the neuter gender nominative or accusative singular desinence .
Classes
Grammar classifies a language's lexicon into several groups of words. The basic bipartite division possible for virtually every natural language is that of nouns vs. verbs.The classification into such classes is in the
tradition of Dionysius
Thrax, who distinguished eight categories: noun, verb, adjective, pronoun, preposition, adverb, conjunction, interjection.
In Indian grammatical tradition, Panini introduced a
similar fundamental classification into a nominal (nāma, suP) and a
verbal (ākhyāta, tiN) class, based on the set of desinences taken
by the word.
References
- Bauer, L. (1983) English Word Formation. Cambridge. CUP.
- Brown, Keith R. (Ed.) (2005) Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics (2nd ed.). Elsevier. 14 vols.
- Crystal, D. (1995) The Cambridge Encyclopaedia of the English Language. Cambridge: CUP, 1995.
- Plag, Ingo.(2003) Word formation in English. CUP
External links
- What Is a Word? - a working paper by Larry Trask, Department of Linguistics and English Language, University of Sussex.
words in Arabic: كلمة (لغة)
words in Belarusian (Tarashkevitsa): Слова
words in Breton: Ger
words in Bulgarian: Дума
words in Catalan: Paraula
words in Czech: Slovo (lingvistika)
words in Danish: Ord
words in German: Wort
words in Estonian: Sõna
words in Spanish: Palabra
words in Esperanto: Vorto
words in Persian: واژه
words in French: Mot
words in Croatian: Riječ
words in Ido: Vorto
words in Indonesian: Kata
words in Interlingua (International Auxiliary
Language Association): Vocabulo
words in Icelandic: Orð
words in Italian: Parola
words in Hebrew: מלה
words in Lithuanian: Žodis
words in Hungarian: Szó (nyelvészet)
words in Macedonian: Збор
words in Malayalam: വാക്ക്
words in Dutch: Woord
words in Japanese: 語
words in Norwegian: Ord
words in Norwegian Nynorsk: Ord
words in Occitan (post 1500): Mot
words in Polish: Wyraz
words in Portuguese: Palavra
words in Romanian: Cuvînt
words in Russian: Слово (лингвистика)
words in Albanian: Fjala
words in Simple English: Word
words in Slovak: Slovo (lingvistika)
words in Slovenian: Beseda
words in Serbian: Реч
words in Finnish: Sana
words in Swedish: Ord
words in Tagalog: Salita
words in Thai: คำ
words in Turkish: Sözcük
words in Ukrainian: Слово
words in Yiddish: װאָרט
words in Chinese: 词语