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UNIVERZA V MARIBORU FILOZOFSKA FAKULTETA Oddelek za anglistiko in amerikanistiko Diplomsko delo NEOLOGISMS IN PUBLIC DISCOURSE Mentorica: Kandidatka: doc. dr. Katja Plemenitaš Tanja Medvešek Maribor, junij 2009

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Page 1: NEOLOGISMS IN PUBLIC DISCOURSE - core.ac.uk · The neologisms we have found were analyzed and categorized into word- formation categories; we wanted to find out which is the most

UNIVERZA V MARIBORU

FILOZOFSKA FAKULTETA

Oddelek za anglistiko in amerikanistiko

Diplomsko delo

NEOLOGISMS IN PUBLIC

DISCOURSE

Mentorica: Kandidatka:

doc. dr. Katja Plemenitaš Tanja Medvešek

Maribor, junij 2009

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ZAHVALA

Zahvaljujem se svoji mentorici doc. dr. Katji Plemenitaš za

pomoč pri nastajanju diplomskega dela.

Zahvala pa gre tudi staršem, ki so mi omogočili študij ter

mi pri tem vedno stali ob strani.

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I Z J A V A

Podpisana Tanja Medvešek, rojena 30. 10. 1977, študentka Filozofske fakultete

Univerze v Mariboru, smer angleški jezik s književnostjo in slovenski jezik s

književnostjo, izjavljam, da je diplomsko delo z naslovom Neologisms in public

discourse, pri mentorici doc. dr. Katji Plemenitaš, avtorsko delo. V diplomskem

delu so uporabljeni viri in literatura korektno navedeni; teksti niso prepisani brez

navedbe avtorjev.

Tanja Medvešek Maribor, 15. junij 2009

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ABSTRACT This diploma thesis focuses on the new words called neologisms used in public

discourse. The main source for this research was the Internet. Neologisms are

mainly presented from a word-formational standpoint. Some terminology is also

explained for better understanding of word-formational processes. We explained

the reasons why new words are coined and what neologisms by the definition

really are.

The neologisms we have found were analyzed and categorized into word-

formation categories; we wanted to find out which is the most productive word-

formational process in creating neologisms in English language. We also

analyzed their meaning and frequency of use. We used the linguistic corpus

Coubild Bank of English to analyze the frequency of the words.

Key words: neologism, nonce-words, word-formation, lexikology, vocabulary,

society, culture.

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POVZETEK

Diplomsko delo je osredotočeno na novonastale besede v javnem diskurzu, ki se

imenujejo neologizmi. Glavni vir raziskovanja teh besed je bil internet.

Neologizmi so predstavljeni predvsem z besedotvornega vidika. Za boljše

razumevanje besedotvornih postopkov so razloženi tudi nekateri pojmi. Raziskali

smo tudi, zakaj sploh neologizmi nastajajo in kaj neologizmi po svoji definiciji

sploh so.

Poiskani neologizmi so bili analizirani in razvrščeni glede na besedotvorni

postopek. Želeli smo ugotoviti, kateri postopek je najbolj produktiven v

angleškem jeziku. Predstavili smo pomen neologizmov in pogostost pojavljanja

oz. uporabe. Za pridobitev tega podatka smo uporabili elektronsko zbirko besedja,

elektronski korpus imenovan Coubild Bank of English.

Ključne besede: neologizem, priložnostnice, besedotvorje, leksikologija,

besednjak, družba

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Contents

1 INTRODUCTION ................................................................................................1

2 NEOLOGISMS: THE CREATION OF NEW WORDS ......................................2

2.1 Meaning and form of neologisms .................................................................2

2.2 Neologisms vs. nonce words.........................................................................3

2.3 Research history of neologisms ....................................................................5

2.4 Neologisms entering dictionaries..................................................................6

2.5 Neologisms from the word-formation perspective .......................................8

2.5.1 Some terms used in describing processes of word-formation...............8

2.5.2 Types of word-formation in English...................................................10

3 MOTIVES FOR THE CREATION OF NEW WORDS ....................................16

3.1 Changing culture .........................................................................................18

3.2 Cultural acceptance .....................................................................................20

4 PRESENTATION OF THE RESEARCH ..........................................................23

4.1 Analysis of meaning and source of chosen neologisms..............................24

4.1.1 Creating...............................................................................................24

4.1.2 Borrowing ...........................................................................................25

4.1.3 Combining...........................................................................................26

4.1.4 Shortening ...........................................................................................32

4.1.5 Blending ..............................................................................................33

4.1.6 Shifting................................................................................................41

4.1.7 Source unknown..................................................................................42

4.2 Word-formation types of chosen neologisms .............................................44

4.3 Frequency of chosen neologism: Cobuild Bank of English........................50

4.4 Detailed analyses of some selected neologisms..........................................54

5 CONCLUSION...................................................................................................57

6 Bibliography........................................................................................................59

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1 INTRODUCTION

One of the important characteristics of every language is its instability. The

language changes because of the fast-changing culture, technology and politics.

Changes can be visible in vocabulary, especially in the area of word usage, or in

grammar.

In this diploma work we focused on vocabulary and its use. Our main focus was

on new words called neologisms. We were interested in the origin of these new

words and the word-formational processes they were based on.

Firstly, we got familiar with different word-formational processes and

classifications. We chose John Algeo’s classification because of his seventh

class: source unknown. After we studied the theory of neologisms we started to

search for interesting new words. Our criteria was also to look for neologisms

consisting of one single word and not a phrase. Our main linguistic source was the

Internet. We were looking for words that were based on different word-

formational processes and were published in newspapers or heard on TV or radio.

We collected the words in different areas such as fashion, technology, computers,

sport etc. At the end we also looked at word frequency of the chosen neologisms.

For this research we used corpora from The Bank of English.

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2 NEOLOGISMS: THE CREATION OF NEW WORDS

2.1 Meaning and form of neologisms Term neologism stands for words which are created to denote new objects or to

express new concepts in a certain period of time in language.

A neologism came from Greek language: neo means 'new' and logos means

'word'. The term neologism was coined in 1803 (Wikipedia).

According to Algeo (1991) a new word is a form or use of a form not recorded in

general dictionaries. The form may be one that is usually spelled as a single word

or a compound or even an idiomatic phrase.

Definition taken from the free encyclopedia Wikipedia is similar:

“A neologism is a word, term, or phrase that has been recently created (or

"coined"), often to apply to new concepts, to synthesize pre-existing concepts, or

to make older terminology sound more contemporary. Neologisms are especially

useful in identifying inventions, new phenomena, or old ideas that have taken on a

new cultural context.”

Which words belong to the class of neologisms is relative and depends on

historical characteristics. Every new word that appears in the language is

neologism at the beginning of its existence. After some time and after being

accepted by the speakers it can enter the standard vocabulary. For example: in

year 1984 a word robot was coined by Karel Čapek and today it is used in many

languages. Another example is newspeak first mentioned in George Orwell’s

novel from 1984. (Muhvić, 2005)

While gathering definitions of neologisms from different sources we can conclude

that they are very diverse and inaccurate. Nevertheless, we can sum up some

fundamental facts about this lexical category from all these diverse definitions.

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According to R. Simeon neologism is:

• new linguistic formation which is not widely excepted as a word or phrase,

• old word used in a new content,

• new word or word phrase which has recently appeared in language.

D. Herber for example believes neologisms are lexical units or signs which appear

in a certain period of time of linguistic development of one group. They start to

become accepted and eventually become a language standard. After some time

they are not felt as new anymore by their users. M-F. Mortureux feels a dose of

instability and lots of contradictions in all understandings of neologisms. (Muhvić,

2005)

While defining neologisms we also have to take into consideration the dimension

of time. We are talking about the time elapsed from the creation of the new word.

Definitions of neologisms always stress that these are new words. What is “new”?

How much time can pass by? We can not really say. It depends and it is a very

biased opinion. One of the facts that causes this difference of opinions is also its

diverse system of generation.

2.2 Neologisms vs. nonce words

Not all new words belong to the class of neologisms. Some are used in one special

situation or by a single person. Someone can create a new word just to identify

himself, his personality, to be notable by public and show his creativity.

Form and meaning or just meaning make neologisms different from other

vocabulary. Consequently we distinguish between two types of neologisms

(Muhvić, 2005):

1. denominal neologisms or just neologisms

2. stylistics neologisms or occasionalisms

Denominal neologisms are mainly used by a wider group of people. Stylistic

information is not important in this group of neologisms. They are created to

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satisfy the need for communication. Speakers tend to make their utterances as

efficient and effective as possible to reach their communicative goals. In

comparison with the second group of neologisms this one is undoubtedly

numerical.

Stylistic neologisms are often marked as occasionalisms or nonce-words. We

have to stress the difference between neologisms and nonce words here. By its

definition nonce words are words coined “for the nonce” — made up for one

occasion and not likely to be encountered again. Neologisms are much the same

thing as occasionalisms. However, there is a slight difference. They are brand-

new words or brand-new meanings for existing words, coined for a specific

purpose, and occasionally these words will enter the standard vocabulary.

The notion of stylistic neologisms is connected with the frequency of their usage.

Stylistic neologisms often occur in literature and reflect the writer’s style. They

are usually used only once. The given word or meaning holds only in the given

context and is meant only to “serve the occasion”. They rarely become a part of

standard vocabulary, because normally they are not made to measure the taste of

wide range of people (speakers or writers). The creators’ intention was not for the

word to become a part of everyday conversations but – as we said - to serve

stylistically. Nonce words are often created as part of pop culture and advertising

campaigns. Nonce words frequently arise through the combination of an existing

word with a familiar prefix or suffix. They are coined for use at the moment of

speech. They are temporary and they are not meant to live long. Theoretically they

could become a part of vocabulary.

Regardless of who created a new word (famous or unknown writer, translator or

average speaker) occasionalisms can at the certain time develop into neologisms.

If the need recurs, nonce words easily enter regular use (initially as neologisms)

just because their meaning is obvious. We can conclude that all occasionalisms

are potential neologisms.

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To sum up: neologisms are some stable innovative element which entered into

communication of a group of people. Occasionalisms, on the other hand, are

understood as words and meanings of words which are used once in a text or in a

communication instance. Every neologism has its author who usually remains

unknown. On the other hand, we know who the authors of occasionalisms are.

2.3 Research history of neologisms

Far back in year 1813 Thomas Jefferson in a newspaper called “Edinburgh

Review” wrote that new words were extremely important for the language.

Already at that time he felt the need for new words to denote new products, new

climate … Debate about these words burst out at the end of 18th century. One

example of this discussion is “Oxford English Dictionary” from 1754 and 1797

which includes explanations of the words such as neological and neology.

(Encyclopedia Britannica, Eleventh Edition)

Firstly, new words were gathered in so-called “Dictionaries of hard words”. In

Great Britain these kinds of dictionaries have a long tradition.

One of the authors is Thomas Bount. His principal works include Glossographia;

a dictionary interpreting the hard words of whatsoever language (1656), which

went through several editions. It defined around 11,000 hard or unusual words,

and was the largest English dictionary at the time of its publication. The aim was

not to present a complete listing of English words, but to define and explain

unusual terms that might be encountered in literature or the professions. (ibid.)

The dictionary was the first to include etymologies and the first to cite sources for

the words being defined. It contained many highly unusual words that had not

previously been included in dictionaries, and others which were not included in

any of the following dictionaries. Glossographia was surpassed in popularity by

the publication in 1658 of The New World of Words by Edward Phillips.

Regardless, Glossographia went through many editions and even more

reprintings, the latest of which was in 1969. (ibid.)

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In the 20th century neologisms were recorded more systematically. The

dictionaries looked like the ones we know today. At the beginning they were just

the appendix of the previous dictionaries: Webster’s American Dictionary of the

English language from 1900 had an appendix titled Appendix of New Words with

the explanation of 121 new words. Because of the fast spread of neologisms it

became clear that neologisms would have to be published in separate dictionaries.

(ibid.)

2.4 Neologisms entering dictionaries

What characteristics must a new word have to get included into a dictionary? In

my opinion it must be memorable at least in one way. Maybe the concept hidden

in the word attracts a person, maybe its spelling is intriguing, pronunciation ...

People are different and we perceive things in different ways.

The possibility of adding new words to a dictionary is another method of giving

the speaking community a chance of active participation. The Australian

Macquarie Dictionary – appearing both in print and online – invites its users to

send new words or phrases that they come across and think should be registered in

the dictionary. The online version of the dictionary also has the sections Word of

the year and Word of the week in which the most prominent words are chosen by

a committee and through online voting. Thus, the committee’s choice can be

different from that of the people.

The Oxford English dictionary also encourages its users to send in new words:

they are asked to email the word they have spotted along with a brief explanation

of its meaning and the information regarding where they found it. Newly invented

words, however, are usually not included in the dictionary. (Muhvić and Skelin,

2008)

Muhvić and Skelin (2008) say that “the use of a newly invented word by a single

person is not sufficient to merit a dictionary entry (unless the person happens to

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be, for example, William Shakespeare or Jane Austin). On the other hand “there is

nothing to stop you using an invented word – so long as you don’t mind the fact

that it will not be understood and will have to be explained every time” (ibid.). If

it genuinely fills a gap in the language, then it may well catch on among a

significant section of the population. It will then become part of the language, and

if it is used in print (or can be traced, for example, in scripts or transcripts of

broadcasts), it will fall within the sphere of the OED’s Reading Programme.

(ibid.)

Many neologisms in the fantastic literature have become successful enough to

make it into dictionaries and/or everyday language. The following table presents

just a few examples and their sources.

Word Author Source Year

Robot Karel Capek R.U.R. 1920

Lilliputian Jonathan Swift Gulliver's Travels 1726

Muggle J.K. Rowling Harry Potter Books 1997

All three neologisms are easy to pronounce and remember, and each of the three

denotes a new concept. Before Karel Čapek, there was no word for a mechanical

person (Sedia, 2005). Muggle is a new word that has not entered the dictionary

yet, but it is widely used by certain group of people - by Harry Potter’s fans.

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2.5 Neologisms from the word-formation perspective

To understand the structure and meaning of neologisms we have to mention some

terms that are crucial for their understanding. Therefore, some terms and word-

formational processes are briefly introduced. The actual examples from my

research are given in the fourth chapter.

2.5.1 Some terms used in describing processes of word-formation

Morpheme

“The morpheme occupies the lowest rank in grammar. It is the smallest

meaningful unit and has a key position in linguistic structure.” (Blaganje, Konte,

1987)

We can distinguish three kinds of morphemes:

a) lexical (root) morphemes: they reveal the basic lexical meaning of the

word. They can stand alone forming a word. Therefore they are also called

free morphemes.

b) inflectional (grammatical) morphemes: they convey grammatical meaning

(e.g. the plural inflection –s, the possessive case inflection –‘s …). They

are always at the end of the word and never change the part of speech the

word belongs to.

c) derivational morpheme: they are units of meaning added to words in order

to change them into other parts of speech.

Lexical morphemes referred to as the root of the word, inflectional and

derivational morphemes are bound morphemes, because they can not stand

alone. Bound morphemes are affixes and are divided into prefixes, infixes and

suffixes.

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Word

“Word is taken to denote the smallest independent, indivisible, and

meaningful unit in speech, susceptible of transposition in sentence.”

[Marchand, 1969]

A word is not necessarily just a sequence of sounds and letters with an overall,

indivisible meaning and/or grammatical function; a word may be made up of a

whole collection of meaningful components, of which some may in other

contexts stand alone as words in their own rights and others may be used only

as parts of words. (Singleton, 2000)

Morphology and word-formation

Morphology generally relates to the structure of words. However, many

morphologists are inclined to make a distinction between morphological

phenomena that have to do with word formation – to which specifically they

attach the term lexical morphology – and aspects of morphology which have

rather to do with grammatical modification of words – which they label

inflectional morphology. (Singleton, 2000)

“Word-formation is a branch of the science of language which studies patterns

on which a language forms new lexical units, i.e. words. Word-formation can

only be concerned with composites, which are analyzable both formally and

semantically.” (Algeo, 1991)

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2.5.2 Types of word-formation in English

While studying the structure of neologisms we have come across different

processes of word-formation and thus different results of the procedure. Since

these processes are crucial for the understanding of the newly coined words, we

introduce some basic terms and word-formational processes in the following

chapter.

New words can be coined by combining existing words into a new unit or a word

with an affix, by changing the word class of existing words, by abbreviating them

and combining their abbreviated forms etc.

While searching for the appropriate classification of patterns on the basis of which

new words are formed in a language, we came across different theories and

classifications. According to Marchand (1969) there are two major groups:

1) words formed as grammatical syntagmas, i.e. words made up of full

linguistic signs. This includes compounding, preffixiation, suffixation

derivation by zero-morpheme, and back derivation.

2) words which are not grammatical syntagmas, i.e. words which are

composites and are not made up of full linguistic signs: blending, clipping,

rime and ablout combinations, and expressive symbolism.

English Word-Formation by Klinar and Davis (1989) recognizes seven large

groups and the following categorization: root-creation, reduplication, blending,

clipping, backformation, conversation, and compounding.

When studying further we came across a dictionary of neologisms – Fifty years

among the New Words by John Algeo (1991). We used his classification of types

of word-formation as a base.

According to Algeo (ibid.) there are six basic etymological sources for new

words: creating, borrowing, combining, shortening, blending, and shifting. All of

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them have a number of important subtypes. There is also a seventh category of

words: source unknown. My decision was based on this last category.

1. CREATING

This process is also called root-creation.

Some new words are made from nothing or, at least, not from existing words.

They were neither inherited from Old English, nor were they adopted from

any foreign language or result in any other process. This is the least productive

process of all since it means a word would have to be made up completely

from scratch. It is theoretically possible, however we have no examples of this

process since we cannot be sure of any words.

Another method of creating is imitating a sound from nature. Such words are

called imitative, echoic or onomatopoetic. English is very rich in these words,

e.g. boom, pop, moo.

2. BORROWING

A more productive source of new words is to borrow them from other

languages.

We distinguish from:

a) simple loanwords

b) adapted loanwords

c) loan translations

Simple loanwords:

These are adopted directly into English, sometimes with minor modifications

of pronunciation, and sometimes with spelling change. Since 1066 French has

been the main source of loanwords into English. Sometimes the borrowing

doubles back upon itself, so that we have items that combine French and

English.

German was the source of great number of loanwords at the time of World

War II and Spanish has also provided some loanwords.

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Adapted loanwords:

Some loanwords demanded remodeling of meaningful parts of their form,

rather than only adjustments of pronunciation and spelling. They are adapted

from their foreign word-pattern to a more native one. Classical languages had

an enormous influence on English. English has borrowed a large number of

Greek and Latin roots which are today a part of English, used like any other

elements to make now words. Sometimes we can still see that people go back

to the classical sources to borrow roots when they need to create a fancy term,

especially in medicine or technology.

Loan translations:

Sometimes English borrows only the meaning of a foreign word and not the

form. Such borrowings, also called calques or loan translations, may exist

alongside the corresponding simple loan they translate.

3. COMBINING

This is, by most counts, the most productive source of all. This is a process of

combining existing words or word parts into a new form. Such combinations

are of two types: compounds and derivatives. The difference is that a

compound combines two or more full words or bases, whereas a derivative

combines a base with one or more affixes.

Compounds:

Compounds, the result of joining two or more bases (independent words) into

a lexical unit, are the most numerous. The process of making these words is

called compounding or composition.

All word classes in any combination possible can be used in compounding,

with the exception of articles. Usually they consist of two words with a space

between them, less often solid or spelled using a hyphen. However, there is a

great deal of variations.

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Compounds are formed according to a particular pattern, therefore we

distinguish between:

a) suffix-like compounds: using a particular word in a last position

sometimes forms compounds.

b) prefix-like compounds: using a particular word in a first position

sometimes forms compounds.

c) classical compounds: we stick together two words with a vowel between

the two compound bases (English adopted this from Greek and Latin)

d) letter compounds: some compounds consist of a noun and one or more

letters of alphabet; the letters often stand for words.

e) alphanumeric compounds: combinations of letters and numerals.

f) sound patterns in compounds: some sounds are parts of compounds;

they can be repeated; sometimes rime is used.

g) respelled compounds: compounds are unconventionally spelled,

frequently used to attract.

h) compound phrases

4. SHORTENING

A new word can be made of omitting some part of old word. We distinguish

between:

a) clipping

b) alphabetism

c) acronymy

d) phonetic elision

e) backformation

Clipping

This is the simplest form of shortening. An expression is shortened at the

boundary between main parts. There are different kinds of clipping according

to the part of the reduction of the word:

a) Back-clipping or hind-clipping: the beginning of the word is retained.

b) Fore-clipping: the end of the word is retained.

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c) Back- and fore-clipping: the middle of the word is retained.

d) Compounding of clipped words: one part of original combination often

remains intact. Usually, the first element is clipped.

Alphabetism

“Alphabetisms or initialisms are abbreviations using the initial letters of the

words of an expression, pronounced by the alphabetical names of the letters.”

(Algeo, 1991)

Acronymy

“The term acronym is used in several ways, but here it is a form made of the

initial letters of the words of an expression, like an alphabetism, but

pronounced according to the normal rules of English orthography.” (Algeo,

1991)

Many acronyms are homonyms with another word and thus pun on it. Very

frequently it is made up for the sake of the pun.

Some forms mix the alphabetic and acronymic principles. The word is partly

pronounced with letter names and partly in the normal spelling-pronunciation

way.

Phonetic elision

The new word is invented by the omission of a specific sound. This sometimes

happens as a result of phonetic processes (aphesis, apocope, syncope).

Backformation

Backformation is also called back-derivation. In this process new words are

formed by omitting an affix or other constituent morpheme.

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5. BLENDING

New words can be coined by blending the sounds and combining the meaning

of two others. The first sounds of one word are usually blended with the last

sound of another. The result of this process is a bland or a portmanteau word.

This process has a number of different variations to coin new words:

a) blending with first element clipped

b) blending with second element clipped

c) blending with both elements clipped

d) blending by overlapping sounds only

6. SHIFTING

Shifting is also called conversion or functional shift. It is a process where one

part of speech is converted into another. The forms of the words remain

unchanged, but they are used in different grammatical functions. The shift

may be in grammar, meaning or even form. That makes them new words.

7. SOURCE UNKNOWN

Some words have origins that are unknown in whole or in part. Etymologists

try to find the origin of such words but sometimes it is just not possible.

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3 MOTIVES FOR THE CREATION OF NEW WORDS

According to Algeo (1991) the need for new words is both pragmatic and

esthetic. Pragmatically, when there are new things to talk about, we need new

words to name them. Or sometimes we want to talk about old things in a new

way.

In fact, the vocabulary of a language is not a closed system but is constantly being

enriched by new words. But why does the language register extend? The reasons

are various:

1. appearance of new concepts or things which need to be named

2. new names as an addition for the already named things because of:

• expressive note – vulgar, humorous

• stylistic reasons – use of jargon, formal and

informal situations

• pragmatic factors – language economy

3. historical, political reasons.

In this chapter, the two prevailing factors involved in the creation of new words

will be presented in detail: the public and its acceptance and the ever-changing

culture.

According to Th. Shippon neologisms are either recognized as a part of

vocabulary or they quickly disappear from the usage in certain language. It is not

necessary for a word to become a part of language.

Neologisms are not present to the same extent in all linguistic areas. Many are

created in the field of technology and techniques, while they are infrequent in the

area of creating new verbs. The reasons for this are obvious.

A very productive area when speaking about neologisms is literature; specially in

the fictional literature or science fiction. Many authors use onomatopoeic words -

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words that mimic a natural sound. Comic books, for example, are full of

onomatopoeia. We often associate certain sounds with visual images. This device

is often used in fiction where good characters have pleasant-sounding names full

of vowels and lilting sounds, and the villains have names that are based on

sibilants or burdened with too many consonants. (Sedia, 2005)

A speaker in a certain moment feels lack of words in his mother tongue to express

something (e.g. describing a thing). This will force him to reach for a word of

foreign language. Less likely, he will create a new word from the elements of his

mother tongue. This is rarer because you usually need more time and inspiration.

We can say neologisms are closely related to public discourse.

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3.1 Changing culture Language is very sensitive to any change in everyday social life of people.

Language is the mirror of society and reflects the fast social, scientific and

cultural changes that are a part of modern society. New words are constantly

added as speakers have to refer to new subject and ideas.

Journalists in particular take advantage of the power that English has to generate

new terms. When we read a newspaper or an advertisement we will likely come

across a word that we have never seen before and was coined by a creative writer

or speaker.

If we are familiar with the language we normally have no problem decoding the

meaning of these new words - new words tend to be transparent in meaning. We

can also use context to help us understand neologisms. Context clues are the most

frequent means of understanding unknown words.

Some of these words are borrowed from other languages while others are coined

from native material. Thus, all languages are subject to the acceptance or creation

of neologisms because of the social and technological development which brings

along new phenomena to which new words are necessarily linked. The triggers to

create new words are present mostly in communication: at a certain moment the

speaker finds out that the words he has at the disposal in his mother tongue cannot

express a new concept, at least not precisely enough, because a word for it is

missing. One can proceed in two ways: one will either take a foreign word which,

within the course of time, might become a loan word or one can create a new

word with elements of one’s mother tongue (it happens more seldom because it

asks for more time and inspiration). Both ways are common in all languages

regardless of their being open to foreign influences and ready to integrate foreign

words or more purist in the sense that they try to coin new words out of their own

linguistic resources. (Muhvić, 2008)

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It is clear that such neologic procedures are linked solely to denominative neology

because they answer the need to communicate a new experience and are not

inspired by aesthetic considerations but by the necessity to be efficient in

communication. (Muhvić, 2008)

Words are a mirror of their times. By looking at the areas in which the vocabulary

of a language is expanding fastest in a given period, we can form a fairly accurate

impression of the chief preoccupations of society at that time and the points at

which the boundaries of human endeavour are being advanced. (John Ayto,

British lexicographer, 20th Century Words, 1999)

Neologisms tend to occur in cultures which are rapidly changing, and in situations

where there is easy and fast propagation of information.

Neologisms often become popular by way of mass media, the Internet, or word of

mouth. Every word in a language was, at some time, a neologism. Though most

of these ceased to be such through time and acceptance.

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3.2 Cultural acceptance

After being coined, neologisms are being judged by:

a) the public and

b) linguists.

Both want to determine their suitability to the language. Many are accepted very

quickly; others need more time. Language experts sometimes object to a

neologism because they believe that a suitable term for the thing described already

exists in the language. Some non-experts who dislike the neologism sometimes

use the argument that the use of neologism is "abuse and ignorance of the

language." (Muhvić, 2005)

Neologisms often become accepted parts of the language. In some cases they

disappear from common usage. Whether a neologism becomes a part of the

language depends on many factors. The most important one is acceptance by the

public. Acceptance by linguistic experts and incorporation into dictionaries also

plays a part. In some cases strange new words succeed because the idea behind

them is especially memorable or exciting. When a word or phrase is no longer

"new," it is no longer a neologism. Opinions differ on exactly how old a word

must be to no longer be considered a neologism; cultural acceptance probably

plays a more important role than time in this regard. (Omics)

Some neologisms, especially those dealing with sensitive subjects, are often

objected to on the grounds that they obscure the issue being discussed, and that

such a word's novelty often leads a discussion away from the root issue and onto a

sidetrack about the meaning of the neologism itself.

Proponents of a neologism see it as being useful, and also helping the language to

grow and change; often they perceive these words as being a fun and creative way

to play with a language. Also, the semantic precision of most neologisms, along

with what is usually a straightforward syntax, often makes them easier to grasp by

people who are not native speakers of the language. (ibid.)

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The outcome of these debates, when they occur, has a great deal of influence on

whether a neologism eventually becomes an accepted part of the language.

Linguists may sometimes delay acceptance, for instance by refusing to include the

neologism in dictionaries; this can sometimes cause a neologism to die out over

time. Nevertheless if the public continues to use the term, it always eventually

sheds its status as a neologism and enters the language even over the objections of

language experts.

According to expectance by people and mass media we recognize three groups of neologisms.

• Unstable - Extremely new, being proposed, or being used only by a very

small subculture.

• Diffused - Having reached a significant audience, but not yet having

gained acceptance.

• Stable - Having gained recognizable and probably lasting acceptance.

(ibid.)

In many languages very interesting fact is noticed in connection to neologisms.

On the one hand, we can see that public is very fascinated by new words. These

new words are firstly shown and observed in printed media and that is followed

by readers commenting the new word. On the other hand, interests about these

words are not particularly witnessed in linguistic circles, although neologisms

intervene with many important areas of language like lexicology, word formation,

linguistics etc.

In 1836 Wilhelm von Humboldt commented that vocabulary of a certain language

must not be an inactive mass, on the contrary: it has the all-time ability to generate

and re-generate new words.

All languages are exposed to coining of new words and changes of new words.

They are forced into this because of the fast social development which brings

about new events and therefore a need for new words.

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Every word evokes a certain response in us. Many authors rely on languages that

already exist. Creating new words on the basis of an established language has the

advantage of authenticity – the words feel like connected parts of a large whole,

not an assortment of random sounds. Those kinds of words are more likely to be

accepted by the public.

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4 PRESENTATION OF THE RESEARCH

In this chapter neologisms we have researched are introduced. We will present

neologisms from different points of view. We will analyze their origin, the word-

formational process they are based on, and their meaning. The first criterion was

to select forty-four different neologisms from different areas, such as fashion,

sport, politics etc. The second criterion was the date of the creation of neologisms.

We decided to investigate the period of three years: 2004-2006.

While searching for these neologisms we were trying to find interesting new

words from the aspect of meaning and word-formational process. Our main source

was the Internet. Almost all of these examples had been primarily published in

newspapers or magazines. Printed material is easier to gather and is more precise

than oral since oral citations do not provide reliable information regarding

spelling. In other research studies, for example, speech and other forms are

equally valid as sources of evidence. The dominance of printed citations is a

matter of convenience.

First we were interested in the meaning of the word and its context which is often

indispensable when trying to understand a new word. Secondly, we were

interested in word-formational processes and the percentage that each process is

represented by. Thirdly, we were interested in the frequency of chosen

neologisms. To gather this data we used the Cobuild Bank of English Words.

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4.1 Analysis of meaning and source of chosen neologisms

Because neologisms are new words, which are not widely spread, we thought that

it was necessary to give explanation of their meaning. We used different Internet

sources, like different on line dictionaries. For better understanding the context is

also very important or even essential. We must not neglect the original source,

because we want to examine which is the most productive area in human life.

After we summed up these neologisms we chose to sort them by word formational

processes.

4.1.1 Creating

No example was found.

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4.1.2 Borrowing

1 . doosra n.

Meaning: In cricket, a ball bowled in such a way that it spins away from right-

handed batsmen. The term, the Hindi/Urdu word meaning "second, another".

Example citations: After Tresco worked him away for a couple of runs, Murali

lofted his doosra towards the England player's outside edge.

Source: The Guardian, May 11, 2006

2. galactico n.

Meaning: world-famous, highly-paid soccer player

Example citations: Germany skipper Michael Ballack was today unveiled as the

latest Chelsea galactico as the Premiership champions underlined their intention

to retain the title for a third time next season.

Source: The Mirror, May 15, 2006

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4.1.3 Combining

1. anti-anti-American adj.

Meaning: Hostile to people or ideas that are critical of the United States.

Example citations: In his latest book, "American Vertigo", French author

Bernard-Henri Lévy retraces Alexis de Tocqueville's journey through America.

He spoke with Elise Soukup.

"You're a self-titled "anti-anti-American." Is that still true?"

"What I was before, I am still. It is like in life when you know someone better:

you know his dark side and his bad habits, but it doesn't mean that you like him

less."

Source: Elise Soukup, "Fast Chat: Road Trip," Newsweek, January 23, 2006

2. Bunyanesque adj.

Meaning: Describing an action or deed that is extremely impressive, if not

superhuman; from the American tall tale featuring Paul Bunyan.

Example citations: Chamberlain was a gargantuan force in the NBA, a player of

Bunyanesque stature who seemed to overshadow all around him.

Source: NBA's Greatest Moments: Wilt Scores 100!

http://www.nba.com/history/wilt100_moments.html, 10. 6. 2008

3. bling-bling n.

Meaning: Expensive or gaudy jewelry worn in excessive amounts; a flashy or

tasteless display of wealth.

Example citations: Many of today's popular TV shows, from ''Entertainment

Tonight'' and ''Access Hollywood'' to practically anything on the E Channel,

suggest we've become a bling-bling society. TV specials showcase the opulence

of our favorite entertainers — Ben Affleck, Jennifer Lopez, Will Smith, etc.

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Newscasts report the price of diamonds and other jewelry worn by stars at popular

award shows.

Source: Davey D, "Fixation on bling-bling isn't limited to hip-hop," San Jose

Mercury News, August 8, 2004

4. clickprint n.

Meaning: A pattern of web surfing behavior that uniquely identifies the person

doing the surfing.

Example citations: By observing how people navigate around a site over a

number of sessions, an e-commerce company could distinguish between two

anonymous surfers. That could have important implications in preventing fraud: if

someone signed in with an existing user's logon, but their clickprint differed, that

might be an indication that their ID had been stolen.

Source: Charles Arthur, "Is it possible to be identified by your 'clickprint'?," The

Guardian, September 28, 2006

5. crowdsourcing pp.

Meaning: Obtaining labor, products, or content from people outside the company,

particularly from a large group of customers or amateurs who work for little or no

pay.

Example citations: I was introduced to the crowdsourcing concept earlier this

year by Patrick Lor, executive vice-president at iStock Photo. /…/ When Getty

Images purchased iStock Photo in February for $50-million (U.S.), crowdsourcing

suddenly seemed a lot more credible.

Source: Shane Schick, "'Crowdsourcing' — idea power from the people," The

Globe and Mail, August 9, 2006

6. domainer n.

Meaning: A person who makes a living from domain name speculation or by

purchasing popular domain names and filling the sites with advertising.

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Example citations: A single good domain name — Candy.com, Cellphones.com,

Athletesfoot.com — can bring in hundreds of dollars a day, in some cases while

the owner hardly lifts a finger. Schwartz, for instance, directs his traffic to one of

the many small companies that serve as go-betweens with Google and Yahoo, the

two giants that make this all possible. The middlemen, known as aggregators, do

all the heavy lifting, designing the sites and tapping into one or the other of the

search engines advertising networks to add the best-paying links. Many other big

domainers cut out the middlemen, creating their own web pages and working

directly with Google or Yahoo.

Source: Paul Sloan, "Masters of Their Domains," Business 2.0, November 18,

2005

7. Googlejuice n., also spelled Google-juice, Google juice.

Meaning: The presumed quality inherent in a Web site that enables it to appear at

or near the top of search engine results, particularly those of the Google search

engine. Example citations: Foreshadowing the importance of links and the rise of

Google's PageRank algorithm, Pinkerton then ran a test on his newly created

database in March 1994. Which sites, he wondered, had the most references, or

links, from other sites (in today’s parlance, the most Googlejuice)?

Source: John Battelle, "The Search," Portfolio Hardcover, September 8, 2005

8. hyper-evolution n., spelled also hyperevolution

Meaning: Extremely rapid evolution, particularly as a result of man-made

factors; extremely rapid change.

Example citations: When Tiger Woods showed up at an Electronic Arts campus

in June for a progress report on the latest installment in the "Tiger Woods PGA

Tour" video game franchise, his initial reaction wasn't quite what its designers

were expecting. The golf great grew a little impatient upon viewing TV images of

his swing and asked when he could see the game. /…/ It was Woods' initiation to

the hyperevolution that is changing the look and feel of video games, which are

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taking huge strides toward a long-standing goal of making characters and scenery

appear as real as possible.

Source: Kevin Kelleher, "Game Face," The Hollywood Reporter, September 26,

2006

9. man-flu n., also spelled man flu.

Meaning: A severe cold, mistakenly self-diagnosed as the flu, particularly by a

man.

Example citations: Psychologist Professor Geoff Beattie says: "Exaggeration is

endemic. But 'man flu' is a case of self deception.

Men appear to be conditioned to think that anything that stops them dead in their

tracks must be a flu, rather than the common cold.

A cold simply doesn't sound serious enough."

Source: Jane Symons, "Women also catch man-flu," The Sun (England),

November 30, 2006

10. mashup n., also: mash-up, mash up.

Meaning: Information created by combining data from two different sources.

Example citations: Ever heard of a "mashup"? This is a music track that

combines samples of one familiar song with the recorded vocals from another,

such as "Switchin' Alive," with Will Smith rapping "Switch" over the Bee Gees'

"Staying Alive."

Source: Eric Gwinn, "Create your own music 'mashups' with free software," St.

Paul Pioneer Press, November 16, 2005

11. neogeography n.

Meaning: The practice of combining online maps with data — such as blog posts,

websites, and annotations — related to specific places on those maps.

Example citations: Cartography could be undergoing a digital revolution, with

neogeography, the practice of mixing online maps with blogs, gaining in

popularity a recent report suggests.

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Source: K. C. Jones, "Internet Brings Digital Revolution to Mapping," CMP

TechWeb, May 4, 2006

12. newpeat n.

Meaning: A repeat that is slightly different from the original.

Example citations: In many ways, NBC's "newpeats" are the TV version of what

other industries have already been doing. The music business in recent years has

been putting out greatest hits CDs with one or two new songs on them. The

popularization of DVDs, too, has made splicing together old material acceptable:

A new DVD of "Don't Look Back," a 1967 documentary about Bob Dylan,

includes a whole new documentary culled from unused footage of the original.

Source: Brooks Barnes, "NBC Remixes 'The Office'; Reruns Become

'Newpeats'," The Wall Street Journal, March 9, 2007

13. splitters n.

Meaning: A family that splits their time between two or more houses.

Example citations: Enabled by cheap airfares, flexible work schedules and

technology like cellphones, BlackBerrys and the Internet, a growing number of

people are shuttling between two or more homes, blurring the age-old distinction

between the primary and the vacation home. Unlike previous generations, these

"splitters" do not think of themselves as living and working in one place and

relaxing in another. On the contrary, they come and go as they please, making

friends and doing business in places hundreds, even thousands, of miles apart.

Source: Motoko Rich, "Double Nesters", The New York Times, January 19, 2006

14. superinfector n. Also: super-infector, super infector

Meaning: A person with a contagious disease who demonstrates an above-

average ability to pass the disease on to others.

Example Citation: In China's Guangdong province ... a shrimp salesman

apparently caused 90 others to fall sick at three hospitals in January. Many of

those who fell sick apparently did not infect others, but one of them, a doctor

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named Liu, became a super-infector. He traveled to Hong Kong and stayed at the

Metropole Hotel.

Nearly 20 people may have picked up Liu's infection there. One of them was the

26-year-old super-infector who then showed up at the Prince of Wales Hospital.

Another man, a Chinese American businessman named Johnny Chen, traveled to

Hanoi, where he was hospitalized. He was also a super-infector: 11 healthcare

workers who cared for him fell sick and four died.

In each generation of this expanding network, most of the infected patients

apparently recovered without passing on the illness. But a handful, the shrimp

salesman, Liu, the 26-year-old and Johnny Chen, became super-infectors.

Source: Shankar Vedantam, "A Single Patient Can Prove Lethal," The

Washington Post, April 13, 2003

15. ubersexual n.

Meaning: A heterosexual man who is masculine, confident, compassionate, and

stylish.

Example citations: The phenomenon of the ultra-groomed metrosexual man,

such as David Beckham, 30, is over. Now men have to be ubersexual — more

macho but still in touch with their feminine side, like Jamie Oliver, 30.

Source: Jon Lipsey, "Are you man enough?," Daily Star, September 15, 2005

16. uncouple v.

Meaning: to physically separate oneself from his/her significant other, to cease

the habits of a typical couple.

Example citations: Could you guys uncouple for just a little bit? It's not like

you're eating alone!

Source: Buffy the Vampire Slayer

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4.1.4 Shortening

1. cruits n. Meaning: A group of people that are being sought out to join a team or

organization.

Example citation: They're bringing the 'cruits in'.

Source: Sports website, September 23, 2003

2. RINO n., also spelled rino

Meaning: A member of the Republican party who is viewed as being too liberal.

Example citations: After all, Moore said, "I think if you're a Republican in 2004

you've got to stand for a few things. You've got to be for school choice, and

you've got to be for cutting taxes, and you've got to be for smaller government.

Otherwise, what are Republicans good for? That's why we keep saying [Arlen]

Specter's a rino—a Republican in name only—and let's replace him with a real

Republican."

Source: Philip Gourevitch, "Fight on the Right," The New Yorker, April 12, 2004

3. WOW n.

Meaning: The wife or girlfriend of a professional tennis player competing at the

Wimbledon tennis championships.

Example citations: Today, give a big, warm welcome to the WOWs. The Wives

Of Wimbledon are taking centre stage as the famous tennis tournament enters its

second week.

Source: The Mirror, July 4, 2006

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4.1.5 Blending

1. architourist n., also: archi-tourist.

Meaning: A tourist who visits other countries and cities mainly to study the

architecture.

Example citations: By selecting Hadid, one of the most original, recognisable

and radical architects working today and still one of the very few women, they

have assured themselves a structure with international profile and high archi-

tourist status.

Source: Edwin Heathcote, "Hadid's flying concrete museum," Financial Times,

December 2, 2005

2. biotecture n.

Meaning: Archictecture that incorporates elements of biology.

Example citations: A team at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology has

developed a tree house for grownups — a proper home constructed almost

entirely from living trees and plants. The "Fab Tree Hab" uses an ancient

gardening technique called pleaching — where live tree branches are woven

together to form lattice structures — to literally grow a building from the ground

up. ... While such biotecture may seem far-fetched, the team says the tools to build

a tree house already exist.

Source: Tim McKeough, "The New Climate Almanac: Grow your own home,"

The Globe and Mail, February 17, 2007

3. bluejacking pp.

Meaning: Temporarily hijacking another person's cell phone by sending it an

anonymous text message using the Bluetooth wireless networking system.

Example citations: The tourist was "bluejacked" — surreptitiously surprised with

a text message sent using a short-range wireless technology called Bluetooth.

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Source: Matt Moore, "Cell phone messaging takes a mischievous turn," The

Associated Press, November 13, 2004

4. cablinasian n.

Meaning: Being of Caucasian, Black, Indian, and Asian descent.

Example citationa: And then Tiger Woods said he wasn't actually 'black' at all --

he was 'Cablinasian.'"

Source: Website; November 7, 2003.

5. collabulary n.

Meaning: A common vocabulary with which Web users categorize the data they

find online, particularly one created in collaboration with classification experts to

ensure relevance and consistency.

Example citations: People have a tendency to affect tagging-based search

negatively in two primary ways: by not using enough or relevant tags; and by

tagging the same links using vastly different tag words. For example, a link about

"horses" may be tagged with "equine," "saddles," "mares," "foals," etc. In fact, it

should be tagged as simply "horses". To overcome these problems, PreFound.com

crawls the web sites that users are indicating they would like to share,

automatically adds tags based on site content, and then runs the site through a

process much like a "reverse thesaurus" which reduces large numbers of

synonyms into single "collabulary" words.

Source: "Tackling the Tag-Based Search Dilemma, PreFound.com Social Search

Engine Introduces Automatic Tagging," Business Wire, September 18, 2006

6. crackberry n.; also spelled CrackBerry.

Meaning: A BlackBerry handheld computer, particularly one used obsessively; a

person who uses such a computer obsessively.

Example citations: In Washington and elsewhere, the devices are referred to as

"CrackBerries" because of their addictive quality. Philippe Reines, a 34-year-old

Democrat who works on Capitol Hill (and who coined the term "blirting," for

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BlackBerry flirting), said he went through severe withdrawal after finding that

Martha's Vineyard lacked BlackBerry reception. Mr. Reines wandered around the

Vineyard for days looking for spots of coverage before begging an airline

employee to take his BlackBerry on a round trip to the mainland, where it could

send and receive messages. He got 129 new messages, many of them social.

Source: Jennifer Lee, "A BlackBerry Throbs, And a Wonk Has a Date," The New

York Times, May 30, 2004

7. crittercam n.

Meaning: A camera attached to a wild animal.

Example citations: The latest wrinkle in animal observation is "crittercams." The

cameras are fitted onto wild creatures so scientists learn not only where they go,

but what they're looking at.

Source: Jan TenBruggencate, "Hawaii's Environment," The Honolulu Advertiser,

March 1, 2004

8. flog n.

Meaning: A blog that appears to be written by an individual, but is actually

maintained by a corporate marketing department or a public relations firm.

Example citations: A notorious flog was exposed last week, when bloggers

discovered that a video blog in praise of the Sony PSP was created by Zipatoni, an

agency owned by the Interpublic Group of Companies. The video blog pretended

to be the work of Charlie, an amateur hip-hop artist.

Source: Stuart Elliot, "How to Lose Cadillac And Other Lessons On Madison

Ave. in 2006," The New York Times, December 18, 2006

9. folksonomy n.

Meaning: An ad hoc classification scheme in which Web users apply their own

keywords to site content as a way of categorizing the data they find online.

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Example citations:

Sites such as Yahoo have spent countless dollars to organize information into a

useful taxonomy. Web 2.0 companies are finding that there is great economy and

value in enabling users to dissect and sort information on their own. This process

can be as simple as enabling people to add keywords to content, such as news

articles, photographs, or Podcasts, a process known as tagging.

Tagging often produces strange, overlapping characterizations with surprisingly

beneficial results. Some have called the results a "folksonomy."

Source: John Jerney, "Web 2.0: tapping collective selfishness to create a

revolution," Daily Yomiuri Online, November 8, 2005

10. mobisode n., also: mob-isode

Meaning: A short program, or the edited highlights from a longer program,

designed to be watched on a small, mobile screen such as a digital media player or

a mobile phone.

Example citations: Cuse said the mobisodes, about 90 seconds each, will give

hardcore Lost viewers more information that they probably weren't going to get

through the show itself.

Source: “Lost will find right ending," The Toronto Sun, June 16, 2007

11. movieoke n.

Meaning: A form of entertainment in which a person acts out scenes from a

movie while a silent version of the movie plays in the background.

Example citations: Frustrated actors have a new outlet for their creative urges

that until now was only available to their singing cousins: movieoke, karaoke's

cinematic sibling. The brainchild of film fanatic Anastasia Fite, movieoke offers a

chance for those brave enough to take over from Robert De Niro in his "You

talkin' to me?" monologue in "Taxi Driver," or to strut their stuff alongside Ben

Stiller in "Zoolander."

Source: Pedro Nicolaci da Costa, "Karaoke's cinematic offspring, movieoke, hits

NYC," Reuters News, February 12, 2004

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12. pro-ana adj.; also spelled: pro ana, proana.

Meaning: Promoting or encouraging excessive thinness, extreme weight loss, or

anorexia.

Example citations: The group dieting that is relatively ad hoc among friends and

sorority sisters takes a more organized form on the Internet, where spring break

has become a popular topic on Web sites and message boards maintained by

devotees of a controversial underground movement known as "pro-ana," or pro-

anorexia, who sometimes identify themselves in public by wearing red bracelets.

There are hundreds of pro-ana Web sites promoting and supporting the "anorexic

lifestyle," despite aggressive efforts to shut them down by eating-disorder

activists.

Source: Alex Williams, "Before Spring Break, the Anorexic Challenge," The New

York Times, April 2, 2006

13. puggle n.

Meaning: A dog bred from a pug and a beagle.

Example citations: The sudden popularity of the puggle, a dog bred from a pug

and a beagle, has started up a long-running argument among animal lovers about

mixing breeds and species.

Source: "Designer Dogs Spark Breeding Controversy," NBC 10, November 16,

2005

14. ringxiety n.

Meaning: Mistaking a faint sound for the ringing of one's cell phone.

Example citations This audio illusion — called phantom phone rings or, more

whimsically, ringxiety or fauxcellarm — has emerged recently as an Internet

discussion topic and has become a new reason for people to either bemoan the

techno-saturation of modern life or question their sanity.

Source: Brenda Goodman, "I Hear Ringing and There's No One There. I Wonder

Why," The New York Times, May 4, 2006

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15. sideloading pp.

Meaning: Transferring music or other content to a cell phone using the cell phone

provider's network.

Example citations: Consumers in Japan, South Korea and Great Britain are

already transferring songs directly from their computers to their phones, a practice

known as sideloading, or downloading full-length tracks over their mobile

networks. Ringtones may be big in the United States now, but full-track

downloads and sideloading are the future, said Thomas Hesse, president of global

digital business at Sony-BMG Entertainment.

Source: Alex Veiga, "Wireless carriers banking on mobile music," The

Associated Press, September 23, 2005

16. slivercasting pp.

Meaning: Delivering video programming aimed at an extremely small audience.

Example citations: In the last six months, major media companies have received

much attention for starting to move their own programming online, whether

downloads for video iPods or streaming programs that can be watched over high-

speed Internet connections. Perhaps more interesting — and, arguably, more

important — are the thousands of producers whose programming would never

make it into prime time but who have very dedicated small audiences. It's a

phenomenon that could be called slivercasting.

Source: Saul Hansell, "Much for the Few," The New York Times, March 12, 2006

17. songlifting pp.

Meaning: Illegally downloading music.

Example citations: "For legal online services to continue to break new ground,

we must do our part to protect the integrity of the marketplace," said Cary

Sherman, President, RIAA. "Just as we continue to educate fans about the right

ways to enjoy music online, we will continue to enforce our rights through the

legal system. Songlifting is not without consequences."

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Source: "RIAA Announces New Round Of Music Theft Lawsuits," Recording

Industry Association of America, February 28, 2006

18. spim n., also spelt spIM

Meaning: Unsolicited commercial messages sent via an instant messaging

system.

Example citations: "Spimmers don't actually go into AOL and type in this stuff,"

says Fred Felman, spokesman for Zone Labs Inc., of San Francisco, which

launched two antispim software products over the summer. Mr. Felman says bulk-

message software has clever ways to get around built-in controls in messenger

services by rotating the names used to broadcast pitches, or by generating new

ones when old ones are killed.

Source: Jennifer Saranow, "Angry Over Spam? Get Set for Spim," The Wall

Street Journal, December 31, 2003

19. technosexual n.

Meaning: A male with a strong aesthetic sense and a love of technology.

Example citations: Earlier this year, people who spend less money on mousse

and more on mouse pads decided that if the style-savvy guys could get their hands

on a marketable brand name, then the uber-geeks could certainly come up with

something better than nerd: Thus, the term "technosexual" was born. A

technosexual is not simply in touch with his feminine side but is connected to it

on multiple platforms. He likes gadgets that have lots of gigabytes but are still

small enough to fit in his pocket.

Source: Eric Edwards, "A new kind of lingo for those who tango," Orlando

Sentinel (Florida), May 7, 2004

20. viewser n.

Meaning: A person who watches video content online or on a computer, or who

combines regular TV watching with related digital content.

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Example citations: The fast-paced show, which lasts five to six minutes, offers

"viewsers" — as Mr. Weiner calls viewers of online programming — a roundup

of nine offbeat video clips from various Web sites, and invites them to vote for a

"Pepsi 10th," a favorite clip of their own.

Source: Stuart Elliot, "The Plot Is the Pitch," The New York Times, September 1,

2006

21. wikification n.

Meaning: The process of opening online content to allow for collaboration from

users; to turn an online site into a wiki.

Example citations: So, Chevy marketers thought, let's take this thing a notch

further — let's have an online contest to see who can create the best TV ad for the

new Tahoe. The wikification of the 30-second spot — what could be more

revolutionary than that?

Source: Frank Rose, Commercial Break, Wired, December 1, 2006

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4.1.6 Shifting

1. friend v.

Meaning: On a social networking website, to add a person to one's list of

acquaintances, and vice versa.

Example citations: Even though faculty members are making an effort to reach

out, students are more likely "to friend" deans. When asked how deans react to

students "friending" them, Neigeborn said "Students do friend me and I'm always

excited when it happens. I never friend students unless I talk to them about it

first." She added, "I don't want students to feel pressured because of my position

as a dean. Facebook is a social environment and I don't want to cramp anyone's

style. I'd definitely friend you back if you asked and I'd read your profile and try

to come up with something to put on your wall. I wouldn't make a habit of it, just

once as a way of letting you know that I'm happy to know you."

Source: Sakina Namazi and Casey Waltz, Rutgers deans 'friend' students via

Facebook," Daily Targum (via University Wire), November 6, 2006

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4.1.7 Source unknown

1. zippy n.

Meaning: Zero; nothing. Example citation: "SOMETHING WICKED THIS

way comes! As we roll into the final week of October, the weather is nippy, the

World Series was lost four to zippy and the most anticipated Broadway show in

years comes to town."

Source: Newpaper Review http://www.houstonvoice.com/2005/10-

28/locallife/nightlife/nightlife1028.cfm, October 28, 2005

We searched for neologisms from different fields of our lives. We tried to group

them by the most typical areas. We made the next classification according to the

field in which they are used:

1. lifestyle (personal appearance, thinking, belief …)

2. sport (equipment, players …)

3. entertainment (TV, radio, cinema, movies …)

4. computers and new technology (new technical discoveries, innovations

…)

5. politics

6. other

We have to point out that some neologisms can belong to more than one area. We

based our decision on the context of examples presented in this diploma work.

CATEGORY NEOLOGISMS

lifestyle ubersexual, man-ful, splitters, uncouple, architourist, pro-ana,

technosexual

sport doosra, galactico, bunyanesque, cruits, WOW

entertainment bling-bling, newpeat, zippy

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computers and

new technology

mashup, biotecture, bluejacking, crackbarry, crittercam,

mobisode, movieoke, clickprint, domainer, googlejuice,

hyper-evolution, neogeography, collabulary, flog,

folksonomy, sideloading, slivercasting, songlifting, spim,

viewser, wikification, friend

politics anti-anti-American, RINO

other crowdsourcing, superinflector, cablinasian, crittercam puggle

We assumed that the highest number would belong to the group connected with

technology and its development. We were right. Neologisms usually exist in

cultures that are rapidly changing and developing. People invent all sort of

technical things that need to be named. We live in the Computer Age or

Information Era, therefore neologisms are especially numerical in this area:

Internet plays so important role in our life, we use it all the time, we search for

information, even order our food … It is normal that this field needs to develop

and expend. As a consequence the need for new words increases.

Graph 1: Categories of neologisms according to the field of use

16%

11%

7%

50%

5% 11%

lifestylesportentertainmentcomputers and new technology politicsother

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4.2 Word-formation types of chosen neologisms I have analyzed 44 new words. We grouped them according to the word-

formational process they are based on:

WORD-FORMATIONAL PROCESS NUMBER

creating 1

borrowing 2

combining 15

shortening 3

blending 21

shifting 1

source unknown 1

Table 1: Neologisms according to the word-formational process.

• Creating

No examples were found.

• Borrowing

word word class word-formational process type of word-formation doosra n. doosra simple loanword

galactico n. galactico simple loanword

• Combining

word word class

word-formational process

type of word-formation

anti-anti-American adj. anti + anti + American derivative

bling-bling n. bling-bling compound

bunyanesque adj. Bunyan + -esque derivative

clickprint n. click + print compound

crowdsourcing pp. crowd + source + -ing compound

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domainer n. domain + -er derivative

googlejuice n. google + juice compound

hyper-evolution n. hyper + evolution derivative

man-flu n. man + flu compound

mashup n. mash + up compound

neogeography n. neo + geography derivative

newpeat n. new + peat compound

splitters n. split + -ers derivative

superinflector n. super + inflect + -or derivative

ubersexual n. uber + sexual derivative (borrowed prefix)

uncopuple v. un + couple derivative

• Shortening

word word class

word-formational process type of word-formation

cruits n. (re)cruits back formation RINO n. R(epublican) + I(n) + N(ame) +

O(nly) acronym

WOW n. w(ives) + o(f) + W(imbledon) acronym

• Blending

word word class

word-formational process type of word-formation

architourist n. archi(tecture) + turist blend

biotecture n. bio(logy) + (archi)tecture blend

bluejacking pp. blue(tooth) + (hi)jacking blend

cablinasian adj. ca(ucasian) + bl(ack) +

in(dian) + asian

blend

collabulary n. colla(borative) + (voc)abulary blend

crackbarry n. crack + (blue)barry blend

crittercam n. critter + cam(era) blend

flog n. f(ake) + (b)log blend

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folksonomy n. folk + (tax)onomy blend

mobisode n. mobi(le) + (epi)sode blend

movieoke n. movie + (kara)oke blend

pro-ana adj. pro + an(orexi)a blend

puggle n. pug + (bea)gle blend

ringxiety n. ring + (an)xiety blend

sideloading pp. side + (down)loading blend

slivercasting pp. sliver + (broad)casting blend

songlifting pp. song + (shop)lifting blend

spim n. sp(am) + IM (instant

messaging)

blend

technosexual n. techni(logy) + sexual blend

viewser n. view(er) + (u)ser blend

wikification n. wiki + (identi)fication blend

• Shifting

word word class word-formational process type of word-formation friend v. friend grammar shift

• Source unknown

word word class word-formational process type of word-formation zippy n. zippy unknown

The processes of combining and blending are represented most. Let’s have a

closer look at the subclasses of these two word-formational processes. Numbers

show process of blending is highly represented by blending with second element

clipped. Out of 21 blend neologisms, 11 of them have a clipped second element.

Only 3 blends have their first element clipped while 7 blends have both elements

clipped.

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Graph 2: Blending

With combining derivatives and compounds the results are almost equal: there are

7 compounds and 9 derivatives.

Graph 3: Derivatives and compounds

The most common combination in creating compounds is noun + noun

composition. Out of 7 compounds there are 4 formed in this way. Almost equally

are represented two types of derivation: suffixation and prefixation. We analyzed

five neologisms with a prefix and three with a suffix. We found only one example

with both affixes placed to the base.

Out of 44 neologisms we found two examples of borrowing. All three are simple

loanword. We have not found an example of adapted loanwords or loan

translations. Neologism “doosra” is taken from the Hindu language and it means

“second”. Second neologism is “galactico” and is taken from Spanish language. It

means “a superstar”. Usually this word is used to describe a world-famous

football player who has been signed by Spanish club Real Madrid.

We had some doubts which word-formational process is used with neologism

“ubersexual”. The word comes from German language. It describes a man with a

14%

53%

33%

1th element clipped2nd element clipped both elements clipped

44%

56%

compouns

derivatives

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certain kind of characteristics. According to this we could put it in a group

borrowing. On the other hand, process of derivation is used because we have the

combination of a prefix and a base. Some words that were produced in the same

pattern as “ubersexual” are: very popular word metrosexual, technosexual,

ecosexual …

From the graph below we can see that combining and blending are two very

productive processes. The percentage of blending takes up to 48%, while

combining represents 32%. Less creative process are creating (2%), shifting (2%)

and source unknown (2%). In general, creating is the least productive word-

formational process in English. We found only one example of shifting. Well

known word “friend” is used as a verb instead as a noun.

Graph 4: Word formational processes of chosen neologisms

We believe that 44 neologisms is very small number to generalize which word

formational process is most productive. Therefore we compared our numbers with

the numbers we have found in the book Fifty years among the new words written

by John Algeo.

Graph 5: Word formational processes of neologisms from Fifteen years among the new words

2% 5%

34%

7%

48%

2% 2%

creatingborrowingcombiningshorteningblendingshiftingsource unknown

0%

68%

8%

5%

17% 0%

2%

creating borrowing combiningshortening blending shiftingsource unknown

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If we compare the results we can conclude that in both cases the process of

combining is far most productive: in my research the percent goes up to 48 and in

Algeo’s dictionary it is 68. In the dictionary the second most productive process

mentioned is shifting (17 %), while in my case shifting is one of the least

productive processes. It represents only 2 per cent.

If we look closely at the word class of word formational process we have the

following results.

Most representative is a class of nouns – 37 neologisms (four of them are

participles). Five neologisms are adjectives (one is a participle) and only 2 belong

to a class of verbs.

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4.3 Frequency of chosen neologism: Cobuild Bank of English

In my research we were also interested in the frequency of these neologisms. To

find out the numbers we have chosen to work with The COBUILD Bank of

English Corpus. The Faculty of Arts enabled me full access to the site. We were

looking at the information in connection with where the words were mentioned,

their source, context and the number of times they appear.

The Cobuild Bank of English has hundreds of millions of words of English text

from British, US, Australian and Canadian sources (including textbooks, novels,

newspapers, guides, magazines, and websites). The corpus has been automatically

tagged by word class, and a 200-million-word corpus has been parsed. The Bank

of English is updated and added to on a regular basis to ensure that this resource is

as up-to-date and comprehensive as possible. (Collins)

A corpus is a collection of samples of language held on a computer for analysis of

words, meanings, grammar and usage. Corpora are used in the creation of

dictionaries and this ensures that the language in dictionaries is real language, as it

is used and spoken every day.

At Collins, they are constantly updating the corpora, collecting data from

newspapers, magazines, websites, journals, books, TV, radio, conversations - all

language styles are there.

With the help of corpora, we can:

• access natural, authentic examples of vocabulary and grammar

• check evidence for new senses of existing words and terms

• check the corpus for idioms, compounds, grammar problems, synonyms,

spelling, British and American variants, and frequency statistics

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• research phraseology and the way it is actually written and spoken,

enabling lexicographers to select typical illustrative examples for users

• gain an overview of the word in its linguistic environment, to ensure that

definitions and translations can be tested in all contexts and no

possibilities overlooked (Collins).

The information derived from the Bank of English can improve almost every

aspect of dictionary making. The corpus will show which form is most common

and further analysis will show whether one form is used more in writing and the

other in speech. Many people will have opinions about these points, but when it

comes to committing language information to print in a dictionary we believe that

we should take account of the wealth of data which the Bank of English provides

about our language. Many of the innovative features in the latest editions of

English Dictionary are possible only because of the analyses that have been

carried out of millions of examples of words in use across a range of up-to-date

texts. (ibid.)

The Cobuild Bank of English has many sub corpora. These are updated from time

to time. The first column contains the names we use during the program to refer to

each different corpus, and the last column tells you what they are. The middle

column gives the size of each corpus, in millions of words.

CORPORA’S NAME

CORPORA per million words

SOURCE

oznews 5337528 Australian newspapers

ukephem 3124354 UK ephemera (leaflets, adverts, etc)

ukmags 4901990 UK magazines

ukspok 9272579 UK transcribed informal speech

usephem 1224710 US ephemera (leaflets, adverts, etc)

bbc 2609869 BBC World Service radio broadcasts

npr 3129222 US National Public Radio broadcasts

ukbooks 5354262 UK books; fiction & non-fiction

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usbooks 5626436 US books; fiction & non-fiction

times 5763761 UK Times newspaper

Today 5248302 UK Today newspaper

sunnow 5824476 UK Sun newspaper

We expected to find many neologisms. From the list of neologisms we found only

10 included in this corpus, and they are: biotecture, bunyanesque, cablinasian,

crittercam, flog, friend, puggle, sideloading, splitters and uncouple.

When we started analyzing these words more closely, we found out that almost all

were used in different context and the meaning was therefore different. Does this

mean that these words are really new neologisms or maybe they are nonce-words?

Search results showed that only four neologisms were the one we were searching

for. These are:

- bunyanesque

- biotecture

- cablinasian

- crittercam

For each of these neologisms we will show a concordance line, we will name the

source of the neologisms (the corpora) and give the frequency according to the

size of each corpora.

Bunyanesque

usbook/US of the imagery of Close Encounters was Bunyanesque, especially near the

usbook/US the shakes and worried this likeable, Bunyanesque figure might fade

oznews/OZ inally made him a star, and created the Bunyanesque expectations of him

Two of the examples were taken from American books and one example was

found in Australian newspapers.

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The frequency by sub-corpora:

corpus total numbers of occurrences

average number per million words

usbooks/US 2 0,79

oznews/OZ 1 0,63

Biotecture

usmags/UK Earthship builder with Earthship Biotecture, the company behind the

usmags/UK expand Courtesy of Earthship Biotecture Earthships, the funky home-

Neologism biotecture was found only twice. Both times it was recorded in

American magazines.

The frequency by sub-corpora:

corpus total numbers of occurrences average number per million words

usmags/US 2 0,77

In both cases the source is the same: American magazines.

Cablinasian

brnews/UK Woods, who later described himself as a ` Cablinasian" to represent his

brnews/UK South African; Woods a wiry, intense ` Cablinasian" as he calls

brnews/UK ecent fortunes of the Englishman and the Cablinasian (Caucasian-Black-

This word was noticed three times and always in British newspapers.

Frequency by sub-corpora:

corpus total numbers of occurrences average number per million words

brnews/UK 3 1,12

Crittercam

oznews/OZ when he thought up the idea of crittercam -- a camera which attaches to

oznews/OZ he had a breakthrough -- the crittercam stayed on a whale for 24 hours

oznews/OZ he had a breakthrough -- the crittercam stayed on a whale for 24 hours

oznews/OZ new video camera known as ` Crittercam" (developed by the National

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We found four matching lines and all four were taken from Australian magazines.

The frequency by the sub-corpora:

corpus total numbers of occurrences average number per million words

oznews/OZ 4 1,61

All four come up many times in newspapers (8 times), two times they were

recorded in books and two times in magazines. The main reason is probably

because newspapers and magazines have the task to bring something new to the

public. This media has to be always up to time. We can also say, that the main

source for discovering new words is written source. We believe reasons are

practical: we have time to study the word in its context and we can not go wrong

with the spelling. The only advantage of spoken source is the pronunciation. Here

we can only guess.

4.4 Detailed analyses of some selected neologisms

Some of chosen neologisms we find more interesting because of different

features. We will look them up more closely from different points of view. Some

brought my attention because of its meaning, word class, origin, spelling …

1. UBERSEXUAL

Evolution of this word starts with a word metrosexual, also a neologism which

is already well accepted by public. Metosexual is a neologism of the 2000s,

which firstly identified famous football player David Beckham. Generally this

term applied to heterosexual men with a strong concern for their appearance.

(wikipedia).

The word ubersexual (also spelled übersexual) was created by the same

pattern. They both have word sexual as a stem, but prefix is different. By this

analogy also many other new words were coined. E.g.:

- technosexual (someone who loves technology),

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- ecosexual (environmental conscious person) and

- retrosexual (a men with undeveloped aesthetic sense who spends as little

time and money possible on his apperence and lifestyle).

The word ubersexual derives from German word über, which means above or

superior and Latin word sexus, which means gender. In other words

neologism can be translated as a superior person, a person of a great

importance. This term always refers to a man; therefore it praises male persons

and their qualities.

2. CABLINASIAN

This neologism draw my attention because of the high number of words

coined to make a brand new word. This word was made by the well known,

very famous golfer Tiger Wood. It is a blend of four words: Caucasian, black,

Indian, and Asian:

ca(ucasian) + bl(ack) + in(dian) + asian

He probably wanted to describe his ethnic background, but no suitable term

existed, so the need for a new word came. This is one of the main reasons why

neologisms are made: the speaker could not express himself clearly and

sufficiently. He felt the need to sum up in one word his mixed heritage. We

have already talked about this important factor for creating new words in

chapter 3.

3. PUGGLE

The word puggle has two meanings:

1. A baby echidna, also known as spiny anteaters, four extant mammal

species.

2. A small mixed breed of dog created by mating a pug and beagle.

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In first case puggle is not a neologism. The word is a part of standard

vocabulary. However, in second case puggle appears as a new word. Is this

word created from two names of dog breeds: pug and beagle. Looking briefly

at this word we could say this is an old word used in new context. However,

this is not the case. The creation of the new word is different and it does not

have any connections to the old word.

4. BLING-BLING

This neologism is interesting from the word-formational prospective. Bling-

bling is an ideophone intended to evoke the "sound" of light hitting silver,

platinum, or diamonds. It is not onomatopoeia, because the act of jewelry

shining does not make a sound. Knowing this bling-bling is not a product of

creating. This is not an imitative, because an imitative must imitate some sort

of sound. Combining is a word-formational process used for creating this

word. Bling-bling is a compound where the sound pattern is used.

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5 CONCLUSION

Rapid change in community brings out the need for new words for speakers to

express their thoughts. Speakers want to express themselves as accurately and

clearly as possible. The development of the word forces them to create new forms

to achieve this fact. Neologisms enter our mind and our language in daily

communication.

For our research we chose 44 different neologisms from the period 2004-2006.

They were taken from different areas of people’s life: fashion, technology, culture

… While searching for neologisms through the Internet, we came across many of

them. That shows languages are developing, like culture and technology are.

Language has a property, which is called productivity or creativity.

We have investigated neologisms from different points of view. We looked

closely at their creational processes, meaning, frequency of use, media they were

found in, and the area they were used in. We listed them according to their word-

formational process. At this point we gave the explanation, context and named the

source of each neologism.

Word-formation has a very important role in forming new words, therefore

analyses and the classification according to the word formation process was made.

The most often used process is blending and the most uncommon are creating and

shifting. We were surprised that shortening is at the bottom of the list as we

assumed that people always want to economize and put as much energy into

everything as it is really necessary. The percentage of creating is also low. To

make a new word that is memorable in some was is not easy. Especially in today’s

society when everything is judged severely it is hard to meet the needs of the

people.

While searching through Coubild’s bank of words we expected to find not all but

almost all neologisms. Unfortunately we found only few. we can think of two

reasons: these words are really new or they are considered to be nonce words. All

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examples were found in written media. Written media is easier to investigate and

easier to analyze, but it is also more static and less dynamic.

We can confirm our assumptions that neologisms have an important part in every

society. They are necessary for cultural development of each language society.

The new words are made every day, because we are developing every day.

Sometime old ideas are used and sometimes we have to use our creativeness.

When they can enter standard vocabulary? Depends mainly on people and also on

linguists.

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6 Bibliography

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• “Collins – The Bank of English”.

http://www.collins.co.uk/books.aspx?group=180 Last accessed: 28 Sep

2007

• “Cultural acceptance”.

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• Jackson, H. and Amvela, Z. E. (2000): Words, Meaning and Vocabulary :

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• Sinclair, J. (2008): Borrowed ideas, Language, People; Numbers: Corpus

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Reflection's Edge

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List of sources for neologisms:

• http://www.macmillandictionaries.com/MED-Magazine/

• http://www.wordspy.com/

• http://pages.zoom.co.uk/leveridge/dictionary.html

• http://www.ruf.rice.edu/~kemmer/Words04/neologisms/s.html

• http://rdues.bcu.ac.uk/newwds/2003.html

• http://esa4.rice.edu/~ling215/browse.php?l=g

• http://www-personal.umich.edu/~shameem/neolog.html

List of graphs:

- Graph 1: Categories of neologisms according to the field of use ............ 43

- Graph 2: Blending....................................................................................47

- Graph 3: Derivatives and compounds...................................................... 47

- Graph 4: Word formational processes of chosen neologisms.................. 48

- Graph 5: Word formational processes of neologisms from Fifteen years

among the new words................................................................................ 48