Difference between revisions of "Lexeme (i.e. set of word-forms)"

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A '''lexeme''' is usually defined as a set of inflected [[word-form]]s that differ only in their [[inflection]]al properties. As it is usually assumed that not all regularly formed word-forms are listed in the lexicon, a lexeme in this sense is a [[lexical item]], while a word-form is not (normally).
 
A '''lexeme''' is usually defined as a set of inflected [[word-form]]s that differ only in their [[inflection]]al properties. As it is usually assumed that not all regularly formed word-forms are listed in the lexicon, a lexeme in this sense is a [[lexical item]], while a word-form is not (normally).
  
:::*"a lexme is a (potential o actual) member of a major lexical category, having both form and meaning but being neither, ane existing outside of any particular syntaxctic context
+
:::*''"a lexeme is a (potential o actual) member of a major lexical category, having both form and meaning but being neither, and existing outside of any particular syntactic context"'' (Aronoff 1994:11)
  
 
===Example===
 
===Example===

Latest revision as of 16:13, 7 April 2009

A lexeme is usually defined as a set of inflected word-forms that differ only in their inflectional properties. As it is usually assumed that not all regularly formed word-forms are listed in the lexicon, a lexeme in this sense is a lexical item, while a word-form is not (normally).

  • "a lexeme is a (potential o actual) member of a major lexical category, having both form and meaning but being neither, and existing outside of any particular syntactic context" (Aronoff 1994:11)

Example

The English word-forms boy and boys make up the lexeme BOY. The Latin word-forms habeo 'I have', habes 'you have', habet 's/he has', habemus 'we have', habebam 'I had', habebunt 'they will have', and so on make up the lexeme HABERE.

Origin

This particular use of the term lexeme sems to have its roots in Matthews (1972).

Polysemy

References

  • Aronoff, Mark. 1994. Morphology by itself. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
  • Matthews, Peter H. 1972. Inflectional morphology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.