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- Back-formation abstract "In etymology, back-formation is the process of creating a new lexeme, usually by removing actual or supposed affixes. The resulting neologism is called a back-formation, a term coined by James Murray in 1889. (OED online first definition of 'back formation' is from the definition of to burgle, which was first published in 1889.)Back-formation is different from clipping – back-formation may change the part of speech or the word's meaning, whereas clipping creates shortened words from longer words, but does not change the part of speech or the meaning of the word.For example, the noun resurrection was borrowed from Latin, and the verb resurrect was then backformed hundreds of years later from it by removing the ion suffix. This segmentation of resurrection into resurrect + ion was possible because English had examples of Latinate words in the form of verb and verb+-ion pairs, such as opine/opinion. These became the pattern for many more such pairs, where a verb derived from a Latin supine stem and a noun ending in ion entered the language together, such as insert/insertion, project/projection, etc.Back-formation may be similar to the reanalyses of folk etymologies when it rests on an erroneous understanding of the morphology of the longer word. For example, the singular noun asset is a back-formation from the plural assets. However, assets is originally not a plural; it is a loanword from Anglo-Norman asetz (modern French assez). The -s was reanalyzed as a plural suffix.Back-formation may be particularly common in English since many English words are borrowed from Latin, French and Greek, giving English a large range of common affixes. Many words with affixes have entered English, such as dismantle and dishevelled, and it may therefore be easy to believe that these are formed from roots such as mantle (meaning to put something together) and shevelled (meaning well-dressed) when these words actually have no real history of existing in English.".
- Back-formation wikiPageID "39922946".
- Back-formation wikiPageLength "6154".
- Back-formation wikiPageOutDegree "40".
- Back-formation wikiPageRevisionID "699479463".
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLink Affix.
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLink Anglo-Norman_language.
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLink Backronym.
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLink Barbarism_(linguistics).
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLink Bill_Bryson.
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLink Category:Linguistic_morphology.
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLink Category:Word_coinage.
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLink Clipping_(morphology).
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLink English_plurals.
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLink Etymology.
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLink Folk_etymology.
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLink George_Gobel.
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLink Gerund.
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLink Greek_language.
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLink James_Murray_(lexicographer).
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLink Lexeme.
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLink List_of_English_back-formations.
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLink Loanword.
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLink Mass_noun.
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLink Neologism.
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLink North_America.
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLink Onomasiology.
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLink Oxford_English_Dictionary.
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLink P._G._Wodehouse.
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLink Participle.
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLink Rebracketing.
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLink Retronym.
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLink Sastrugi.
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLink Scrubs_(TV_series).
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLink Siege_of_Mafeking.
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLink Statistics.
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLink Syringe.
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLink Syrinx.
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLink Tamale.
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLink Taxon.
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLink Taxonomy_(general).
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLink Toponymy.
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLink Unpaired_word.
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLinkText "Back-formation".
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLinkText "back-formation".
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLinkText "back-formed".
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLinkText "backformed".
- Back-formation wikiPageWikiLinkText "derived".
- Back-formation wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Redirect.
- Back-formation wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Back-formation wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Who.
- Back-formation subject Category:Linguistic_morphology.
- Back-formation subject Category:Word_coinage.
- Back-formation hypernym Process.
- Back-formation type Election.
- Back-formation type Redirect.
- Back-formation comment "In etymology, back-formation is the process of creating a new lexeme, usually by removing actual or supposed affixes. The resulting neologism is called a back-formation, a term coined by James Murray in 1889.".
- Back-formation label "Back-formation".
- Back-formation sameAs Q989162.
- Back-formation sameAs قياس_خاطئ.
- Back-formation sameAs Derivació_regressiva.
- Back-formation sameAs Rückbildung_(Linguistik).
- Back-formation sameAs Derivación_regresiva.
- Back-formation sameAs پسینسازی.
- Back-formation sameAs Dérivation_régressive.
- Back-formation sameAs גזירה_לאחור.
- Back-formation sameAs Elvonás_(nyelvészet).
- Back-formation sameAs Retroformazione.
- Back-formation sameAs 逆成.
- Back-formation sameAs Retrograde_vorming.
- Back-formation sameAs Tilbakedannelse_(lingvistikk).
- Back-formation sameAs m.0l4k5.
- Back-formation sameAs Q989162.
- Back-formation wasDerivedFrom Back-formation?oldid=699479463.
- Back-formation isPrimaryTopicOf Back-formation.