Never heard Hospital as Hostel...Ever. I checked to make sure I wasn't wrong but...yup. Hostel is not the same as Hospital. I think it's a maybe people might think it's a mix between Hospital and Hotel... because of the "room service". But I've never thought of associating Hospital and Hostel. I have always just associated it with Hotel. Maybe you could've chosen the word "Hospitality", which is English. Hostel is the French word. hos·tel /ˈhästl/ (noun) an establishment which provides inexpensive food and lodging for a specific group of people, such as students, workers, or travelers. I do appreciate your videos a lot. Thank you for putting in the time and effort. You have helped me immensely. Thank you.
@@Trevtutor I know. I'm just saying I had never known of an association between them. But I understood what you were saying. Thank you for your videos. 👏👏👏👏👏👏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
This is superlative series about linguistics. The examples and colors make the subject more accessible. I just want to correct something very important. The laser (in 9:28) is an abbreviation for Light Amplification by StimulatED Emission of Radiation. The past participle should be used here. Even though this mistake seems trivial, but to a physicist it is not.
Oh my gosh this video has been so helpful! I truly admire your passion and zeal TrevTutor (y) Thank you for making such videos :) Also, Is 'coinage' a word formation process?
+Treesa Marshal Yeah, coinage is another way to introduce words. It's usually not a process that's discussed because there's really nothing "interesting" about it.
With the acronym examples, are the acronyms scuba and laser also examples of word formation since we use them as free standing words? But they both are nouns, and can create compound words like you said scuba diving and laser beam, but you can't add either word onto the origin. How does an acronym function in terms of lexical categorisation, and what properties put them under the umbrella of morphology?
What about the words ham, burger, hamburger and the city Hamburg? I guess the hamburger was named after Hamburg. So did we derive the two words ham and burger from it? Or did we coincidentally already have one of those words so we derived the other?
Thank you for the vids - they are great! I was so tired of theoretical bullshit! And you really provide a lot of vivid examples which makes the study process not so hard.
Correct me if I'm wrong but didn't the word orientate come from the word Orient? Etymology wise. I'd source something but I think I read it in a book. Basically Europeans knew the "Orient" was to the east, where the sun rises, and would "orient themselves" by figuring out where the east was. Might have read that in "Maps of the Imagination: The Writer as Cartographer".
I would've thought that a word would need identical phonetic transcriptions across languages in order to be considered onomatopoeic. Then again, I guess not all languages use all of eachother's sounds, so some sounds may be harder/different to replicate from a given perspective.
Thank you! I am studying linguistics in a French university in Paris and your videos help me so much, but sometimes I need to verify translations and terminologies that you use vs what they use here. I appreciate all of your videos, thank you for sharing!
while you comparing the difference or similarities between English and Japanese onomatopoeia, I'd like to offer you an idea of the dog barks. Actually In Japanese, it's sound more like wang-wang, the similar pronouncation to woof.
What is interesting about blended words is that there are several examples in which it is not readily apparent where one word ends and the other begins. Are the letters o and t in "motel" from "motor" or "hotel"? Is the letter i in "liger" from "lion" or "tiger"?
You could probably assume that in blended words with 4 or more sounds, you would take at least two sounds from both words. You'd have to check a lot of other blends in English though to check if it's common for the first vowel in two syllable words to come from the first word in a blend, or the second.
True, though I think the vowel is decided based on how the blended word will sound. Thus, when blending "phone" and "tablet," "phablet" won out as the newly coined word, as it probably sounded better to more people than did "phoblet."
What would "boop" be classified as? As in, poking someone and saying boop. I talked to a friend about this and she said in her dialect of German they say "bip" or maybe it was "pip" instead (/i/).
Argentina v Croatia - 2018 FIFA World Cup Russia™ - Match 23 Na bijna crash @ Manyeleti ASMR RAW Octopus + Tuna Sashimi (SAVAGE EATING SOUNDS) No Talking | SAS-ASMR Development of tooth : Bud Stage Introduction to Linguistics] Word Creation using Clipping, Blending, and More
Never heard Hospital as Hostel...Ever. I checked to make sure I wasn't wrong but...yup. Hostel is not the same as Hospital. I think it's a maybe people might think it's a mix between Hospital and Hotel... because of the "room service". But I've never thought of associating Hospital and Hostel. I have always just associated it with Hotel. Maybe you could've chosen the word "Hospitality", which is English. Hostel is the French word.
hos·tel
/ˈhästl/
(noun)
an establishment which provides inexpensive food and lodging for a specific group of people, such as students, workers, or travelers.
I do appreciate your videos a lot. Thank you for putting in the time and effort. You have helped me immensely. Thank you.
I mean the process happened over hundreds of years. It wasn't at the same time.
@@Trevtutor I know. I'm just saying I had never known of an association between them. But I understood what you were saying. Thank you for your videos. 👏👏👏👏👏👏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
thank you :) you are an amazing teacher
Yes sir your videoes are very useful for me.
Thanks sir.
This is superlative series about linguistics. The examples and colors make the subject more accessible. I just want to correct something very important. The laser (in 9:28) is an abbreviation for Light Amplification by StimulatED Emission of Radiation. The past participle should be used here. Even though this mistake seems trivial, but to a physicist it is not.
I just copied it from the first link on google I saw. I see I picked the link that was slightly off.
Excellent lesson. Thank you a lot. I was wondering if you could share with us a test to practice what we learnt from the video. Thanks again.
In thankful for this video it's very very simply and makes linguistics more manageable
Thank you very much, quite informative in a simpler way...
Oh my gosh this video has been so helpful! I truly admire your passion and zeal TrevTutor (y)
Thank you for making such videos :)
Also, Is 'coinage' a word formation process?
+Treesa Marshal Yeah, coinage is another way to introduce words. It's usually not a process that's discussed because there's really nothing "interesting" about it.
Thank you for saving my life
With the acronym examples, are the acronyms scuba and laser also examples of word formation since we use them as free standing words?
But they both are nouns, and can create compound words like you said scuba diving and laser beam, but you can't add either word onto the origin. How does an acronym function in terms of lexical categorisation, and what properties put them under the umbrella of morphology?
I enjoyed ur lessons ur a great teacher thank you sir
really learnt here ..tnx broo ..i m phatan (pashtoon) pakistan
So so nice teaching sir g....
What about the words ham, burger, hamburger and the city Hamburg? I guess the hamburger was named after Hamburg. So did we derive the two words ham and burger from it? Or did we coincidentally already have one of those words so we derived the other?
I love your voice😍💕
breakfast + lunch = brunch :)
its correct
It's an example of portmanteau
Is this a blending morpheme ?????
yup@@fatyfati5661
You are smart
Penguin of doom? Oh boy, linguistics AND memes? Is this heaven?
hi could you please tell me what is a morphophonemic process ? i really need an answer soon :( and thank u in advance
what mean of formation is used for the words "spam" and "spa"?please, help
I REALLY APPRECIATE YOUR WORK, YOU SAVE ME HAHA
Would Greenville = green+village/villa be considered blended ?
God bless you bro
Interesting point with "oink", I live on a farm with pigs and I've always said something more like "oof". I first heard of oink in books and at school
Thank you for the vids - they are great! I was so tired of theoretical bullshit! And you really provide a lot of vivid examples which makes the study process not so hard.
Aidar Amanzhulov ia
+PotatoEz yes the same for me
Cosplay: Costume play --two words that were borrowed then blended in a very non-western way.
And clipping applies across the board to any language correct? For example, in German the "clipped" form of Mathematik would be Mathe.
Please tell about word formation in detail
Thanks a lot
There is also coining new words. Is this considered as part of word creation??
Yes. It will be added in the remake of this video.
Thanks a lot man :) You are an Amazing teacher (Y)
How about applet? Clipping or blending?
Thnkss a tonne....
thank you so much.
how do you classify INTERPOL or International Criminal Police Organization?
Acronym, since it's pronounced as a word.
Correct me if I'm wrong but didn't the word orientate come from the word Orient? Etymology wise. I'd source something but I think I read it in a book. Basically Europeans knew the "Orient" was to the east, where the sun rises, and would "orient themselves" by figuring out where the east was.
Might have read that in "Maps of the Imagination: The Writer as Cartographer".
As far as I know it originates from the latin "oriens," which means "east" or "orient."
I would've thought that a word would need identical phonetic transcriptions across languages in order to be considered onomatopoeic.
Then again, I guess not all languages use all of eachother's sounds, so some sounds may be harder/different to replicate from a given perspective.
Would a word created by blending be a portmanteau?
Yes, but that terminology isn't really used.
Thank you! I am studying linguistics in a French university in Paris and your videos help me so much, but sometimes I need to verify translations and terminologies that you use vs what they use here. I appreciate all of your videos, thank you for sharing!
while you comparing the difference or similarities between English and Japanese onomatopoeia, I'd like to offer you an idea of the dog barks. Actually In Japanese, it's sound more like wang-wang, the similar pronouncation to woof.
That's great
thanks a lot :)
What is interesting about blended words is that there are several examples in which it is not readily apparent where one word ends and the other begins. Are the letters o and t in "motel" from "motor" or "hotel"? Is the letter i in "liger" from "lion" or "tiger"?
You could probably assume that in blended words with 4 or more sounds, you would take at least two sounds from both words. You'd have to check a lot of other blends in English though to check if it's common for the first vowel in two syllable words to come from the first word in a blend, or the second.
True, though I think the vowel is decided based on how the blended word will sound. Thus, when blending "phone" and "tablet," "phablet" won out as the newly coined word, as it probably sounded better to more people than did "phoblet."
Weird that you didn't explain "initialism" with the acronyms
well under stood
please to explain brunch
What would "boop" be classified as? As in, poking someone and saying boop. I talked to a friend about this and she said in her dialect of German they say "bip" or maybe it was "pip" instead (/i/).
Tree diagrams for sentences
How many morpheme in mathematics
2 if you consider mathematics to be plural (mathematic, -s), or 1 if you consider mathematics to be singular (as per latin origin)
If you talk about sporks because you want to be random, and people who want to be random tend to talk about sporks, aren't you just being predictable?
i was waiting to hear something about Allomorphs in morphology
interesting!!!!
otientation and orient
ahahaha we kind of take words. beat them to death and make them english words
funny
Thank you so much if it wasn't for you I would be failing my final tomorrow
Blending can be used for making ship names😁
Ezra+Aria=Ezria💜
I don't make the rules😏
Argentina v Croatia - 2018 FIFA World Cup Russia™ - Match 23
Na bijna crash @ Manyeleti
ASMR RAW Octopus + Tuna Sashimi (SAVAGE EATING SOUNDS) No Talking | SAS-ASMR
Development of tooth : Bud Stage
Introduction to Linguistics] Word Creation using Clipping, Blending, and More
DOES A DOG EVEN MAKES AN /F/ SOUND THO HHHHHH BUT YEAH THAT WAS FUN XD
another blendings:
beaulicious , from beau(tiful) and (de)licious
chatire (←chat + (sa)tire)
cinemenace (←cine(ma) + menace)
ambisextrous (←ambi(dex)trous + sex)
blatterature (←blatter + litera-ture)
foolosopher (←fool + phi-losopher)
camcorder, dancercise, infomercial, vodkatini
the scuba joke made me snort
European English?
we actually take their words, beat them to death and make them English words! :D
amazing, just amazing
Anyway* / any of the ways
Butterfly joke lol
I lost it in wan-wan
tfw you try to find a dog to like you but he doesn't wan-want you at all.
TheTrevTutor xD
Useless