Lexeme Compounding Rule
(Redirected from Compounding Process)
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A Lexeme Compounding Rule is a morphological rule that produces a compound lexeme from other lexemes.
- AKA: MCDR, Compound Word Generation Process, Morphological Compound Derivation Rule.
- Context:
- It can be used by a Word Formation Process.
- It can generate:
- a Compound Noun.
- a Compound Verb.
- a Compound Adjective.
- a Compound Adverb.
- Example(s):
- MCDR(OVER, INDULGE) ⇒ OVERINDULGE
- which can be used to Derive EXOVERINDULGER].
- MCDR(OVER, INDULGE) ⇒ OVERINDULGE
- Counter-Example(s):
- See: Part-of-Speech, Lexical Rule, Word Formation Process, Morphological Processing, Morphological Compounding Rule, Compound Word Generation Process, Word Sense Disambiguation.
References
1999
- (Manning and Schütze, 1999) ⇒ Christopher D. Manning and Hinrich Schütze. (1999). "Foundations of Statistical Natural Language Processing" (PDF). The MIT Press. ISBN: 9780262133609, 0262133601 Chapter 3, pp 83
- QUOTE: The major types of morphological processes are inflection, derivation, and compounding. ...
- (...)
- Compounding refers to the merging of two or more words into a new word. English has many noun-noun compounds, nouns that are combinations of two other nouns. Examples are tea kettle, disk drive, or college degree. While these are (usually) written as separate words, they are pronounced as a single word, and denote a single semantic concept, which one would normally wish to list in the lexicon. There are also other compounds that involve parts of speech such as adjectives, verbs, and prepositions, such as downmarket, (to) overtake, and mad cow disease.
- QUOTE: The major types of morphological processes are inflection, derivation, and compounding. ...