Nominalized Verb
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A Nominalized Verb is a Nominalized Noun whose Head Word is a Verb.
- AKA: Nominalised Verb.
- Example(s):
- “truck driver”?
- "repression"?
- "transcription"?
- "increase"?
- "playing"?
- "falsehood"?
- Counter-Example(s):
- a Nominalized Adjective, such as:
- "the beautiful".
- "the joyful".
- a Nominalized Adjective, such as:
- See: Nominalized Adjective, Verbal Compound, Terminological Noun, Nominalization Process.
References
1996
- (McFetridge et al, 1996) ⇒ Paul McFetridge, Fred Popowich and Dan Fass. (1996). “An Analysis of Compounds in HPSG (Head-Driven Phrase Structure Grammar) for Database Queries.” In: Data and Knowledge Engineering Journal, 20(2).
- Selkirk [12] introduces the distinction between verbal and non-verbal compounds. The right member of a verbal compound, its head, is typically a nominalized verb and the left member satisfies an argument of the original verb. An example is truck driver.
1982
- E. Selkirk. (1982). “The Syntax of Words.” MIT Press.