The Semantics of English Negative Prefi xes Dedication This work is dedicated to the soul of my mother (1931-2008) who planted its seeds, supported its progress but didn’t live to reap its fruits The Semantics of English Negative Prefi xes Zeki Hamawand University of Hamburg Published by UK: Equinox Publishing Ltd., Unit 6, The Village, 101 Amies St., London SW11 2JW USA: DBBC, 28 Main Street, Oakville, CT 06779 www.equinoxpub.com First published 2009 © Zeki Hamawand 2009 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or any information storage or retrieval system, without prior permission in writing from the publishers. British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. ISBN 978 1 84553 540 7 (hardback) Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Hamawand, Zeki. The semantics of English negative prefi xes / Zeki Hamawand. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and indexes. ISBN 978-1-84553-540-7 1. English language--Negatives. I. Title. PE1359.N44H36 2009 425--dc22 2008046893 Typeset by Catchline, Milton Keynes (www.catchline.com) Printed and bound in Great Britain and the USA Contents List of fi gures ix List of tables ix Preface xi 1 Negation 1 1.0 Overview 1 1.1 Introduction 1 1.2 Previous endeavours 3 1.2.1 Lexicographical endeavours 4 1.2.2 Grammatical endeavours 5 1.2.3 Morphological endeavours 5 1.3 A new endeavour 6 1.3.1 Axes 7 1.3.2 Goals 10 1.3.3 Steps 11 1.4 Methodology 12 1.4.1 Theoretical method 13 1.4.2 Empirical method 17 1.5 Summary 20 Notes 22 2 Derivation 24 2.0 Overview 24 2.1 Fundamentals 24 2.2 Tasks 25 2.3 Combination 26 2.3.1 The building-block conception 26 2.3.1.1 Representative works 27 2.3.1.2 Combination restrictions 29 2.3.2 The scaffolding conception 31 2.3.2.1 Representative work 32 2.3.2.2 Integration parameters 38 2.4 Interpretation 42 2.4.1 Compositionality 42 2.4.2 Analysability 43 2.5 Summary 45 Notes 47 v 3 Category 49 3.0 Overview 49 3.1 Introduction 49 3.2 Theories of categorisation 50 3.2.1 The classical theory 51 3.2.1.1 Homonymy 52 3.2.1.2 Monosemy 53 3.2.2 The modern theory 54 3.2.2.1 Family resemblance 54 3.2.2.2 Prototype 54 3.3 Negative prefi xes 55 3.3.1 Assumptions 56 3.3.2 Goals 57 3.3.3 Procedures 58 3.4 Prefi xal networks 59 3.4.1 Primary negative prefi xes 60 3.4.1.1 a(n)- 60 3.4.1.2 de- 62 3.4.1.3 dis- 64 3.4.1.4 in- 66 3.4.1.5 non- 68 3.4.1.6 un- 70 3.4.2 Secondary negative prefi xes 72 3.4.2.1 anti- 73 3.4.2.2 contra- 75 3.4.2.3 counter- 76 3.4.2.4 mal- 77 3.4.2.5 mis- 78 3.4.2.6 pseudo- 79 3.4.2.7 quasi- 81 3.4.2.8 sub- 82 3.4.2.9 under- 83 3.5 Summary 84 Notes 87 4 Domain 89 4.0 Overview 89 4.1 Introduction 89 4.2 Theories of lexical relationships 90 4.2.1 The dictionary theory 91 4.2.1.1 Semantic Field 91 4.2.1.2 Componential Analysis 92 vi 4.2.2 The encyclopaedic theory 93 4.2.2.1 Frame Semantics 94 4.2.2.2 Cognitive Domain 94 4.3 Negative prefi xes 95 4.3.1 Assumptions 96 4.3.2 Goals 97 4.3.3 Procedures 98 4.4 Prefi xal domains 99 4.4.1 The domain of distinction 99 4.4.2 The domain of opposition 104 4.4.3 The domain of privation 108 4.4.4 The domain of removal 111 4.4.5 The domain of reversal 113 4.4.6 The domain of treatment 116 4.5 Summary 120 Notes 121 5 Construal 123 5.0 Overview 123 5.1 Introduction 123 5.2 Theories of interpretation 124 5.2.1 Reference theory 124 5.2.2 Conceptualist theory 125 5.3 Negatively-prefi xed constructions 126 5.3.1 Assumptions 127 5.3.2 Goals 128 5.3.3 Procedures 129 5.4 Operative construals 130 5.4.1 Intra-domain construals 130 5.4.1.1 The domain of distinction 130 5.4.1.1.1 non- vs. a- 131 5.4.1.1.2 non- vs. dis- 132 5.4.1.1.3 non- vs. un- 132 5.4.1.1.4 non- vs. in- 133 5.4.1.1.5 a- vs. un- 134 5.4.1.1.6 a- vs. in- 135 5.4.1.1.7 dis- vs. un- 136 5.4.1.1.8 un- vs. in- 136 5.4.1.2 The domain of opposition: anti- vs. counter- 138 5.4.1.3 The domain of privation: dis- vs. un- 139 5.4.1.4 The domain of removal: de- vs. un- 140 5.4.1.5 The domain of reversal: de- vs. un- 141 5.4.1.6 The domain of treatment: mis- vs. mal- 142 vii 5.4.2 Inter-domain construals 144 5.4.2.1 non- vs. anti- 144 5.4.2.2 un- vs. de- 145 5.4.2.3 un- vs. mis- 146 5.4.2.4 dis- vs. mis- 146 5.4.2.5 un- vs. dis- 147 5.4.2.6 dis- vs. mis- 148 5.5 Summary 148 Notes 150 6 Conclusion 153 6.0 Overview 153 6.1 Introduction 153 6.2 The category axis of morphology 154 6.3 The domain axis of morphology 159 6.4 The construal axis of morphology 161 6.5 Discussion 162 References 167 Indexes 177 Linguistic terms 175 Negative prefi xes 177 Word pairs 178 viii List of fi gures Figure 1: The semantic network of the negative prefi x ab- 14 Figure 2: The domain of degradation 16 Figure 3: The construal of the conceptual content normal 17 Figure 4: The semantic network of the negative prefi x semi- 35 Figure 5: The domain of inadequacy 37 Figure 6: The construal of the conceptual content religious 39 Figure 7: The semantic network of the negative prefi x a(n)- 62 Figure 8: The semantic network of the negative prefi x de- 64 Figure 9: The semantic network of the negative prefi x dis- 66 Figure 10: The semantic network of the negative prefi x in- 68 Figure 11: The semantic network of the negative prefi x non- 70 Figure 12: The semantic network of the negative prefi x un- 72 Figure 13: The semantic network of the negative prefi x anti- 74 Figure 14: The semantic network of the negative prefi x contra- 75 Figure 15: The semantic network of the negative prefi x counter- 77 Figure 16: The semantic network of the negative prefi x mal- 78 Figure 17: The semantic network of the negative prefi x mis- 79 Figure 18: The semantic network of the negative prefi x pseudo- 80 Figure 19: The semantic network of the negative prefi x quasi- 81 Figure 20: The semantic network of the negative prefi x sub- 83 Figure 21: The semantic network of the negative prefi x under- 84 Figure 22: The domain of distinction 104 Figure 23: The domain of opposition 108 Figure 24: The domain of privation 110 Figure 25: The domain of removal 113 Figure 26: The domain of reversal 116 Figure 27: The domain of treatment 120 List of tables Table 1: A morphological sketch of the primary negative prefi xes 155 Table 2: A morphological sketch of the secondary negative prefi xes 155 Table 3: A semantic sketch of the primary negative prefi xes 156 Table 4: A semantic sketch of the secondary negative prefi xes 158 Table 5: The domains evoked by the primary negative prefi xes 160 Table 6: The domains evoked by the secondary negative prefi xes 161 ix
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