THESIS ENGLISH COMPOUND NOUNS IN THE NOVEL “JANE EYRE” BY CHARLOTTE BRONTE WITH REFERENCE TO THEIR VIETNAMESE EQUIVALENTS DANH TỪ GHÉP TIẾNG ANH TRONG TIỂU THUYẾT ―JANE EYRE‖ CỦA TÁC
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MINISTRY OF EDUCATION AND TRAINING
HANOI OPEN UNIVERSITY
M.A THESIS
ENGLISH COMPOUND NOUNS IN THE NOVEL
“JANE EYRE” BY CHARLOTTE BRONTE WITH REFERENCE TO THEIR VIETNAMESE EQUIVALENTS
(DANH TỪ GHÉP TIẾNG ANH TRONG TIỂU THUYẾT
―JANE EYRE‖ CỦA TÁC GIẢ CHARLOTTE BRONTE LIÊN HỆ TƯƠNG ĐƯƠNG TRONG TIẾNG VIỆT)
Learner: ĐỒNG THỊ MAI Field: English Language Code: 8.22.02.01
Trang 2MINISTRY OF EDUCATION AND TRAINING
HANOI OPEN UNIVERSITY
M.A THESIS
ENGLISH COMPOUND NOUNS IN THE NOVEL
“JANE EYRE” BY CHARLOTTE BRONTE WITH
REFERENCE TO THEIR VIETNAMESE EQUIVALENTS
(DANH TỪ GHÉP TIẾNG ANH TRONG TIỂU THUYẾT
―JANE EYRE‖ CỦA TÁC GIẢ CHARLOTTE BRONTE LIÊN HỆ TƯƠNG ĐƯƠNG TRONG TIẾNG VIỆT)
Learner: ĐỒNG THỊ MAI Field: English Language Code: 8.22.02.01
Supervisor: Dr Nguyễn Thị Vân Đông
Hanoi, 2020
Trang 3CERTIFICATE OF ORIGINALITY
I, the undersigned, hereby certify my authority of the study project report entitled
English compound nouns in the novel “Jane Eyre” by Charlotte Bronte with reference to their Vietnamese equivalents (Danh từ ghép tiếng Anh trong tiểu thuyết “Jane Eyre” của tác giả Charlotte Bronte liên hệ tương đương trong tiếng Việt) submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of
Master in English Language Except where the reference is indicated, no other person‘s work has been used without due acknowledgement in the text of the thesis
Hanoi, 2020
Đồng Thị Mai
Approved by SUPERVISOR
Dr Nguyễn Thị Vân Đông
Date:………
Trang 4A special word of thanks goes to all the lectures of the Master course at Hanoi Open University and many others, without whose support and encouragement it would never have been possible for me to have this thesis accomplished
Last but not least, I would like to express my gratitude to my family members and friends who supported me and contributed to the completion of my study
Finally, my sincere thanks are due to all of you who will give me some comments after reading the thesis
To all mentioned and to many more, my heart extends the warmest thanks
Trang 52.4.2 Characteristics of English compound nouns 18
2.4.4 Classification of English compound nouns 25
2.4.4.2 Classification according to the componential relationship 27
Trang 62.5 An overview of Vietnamese compound nouns 31 2.5.1 General characteristics of Vietnamese compound nouns 32 2.5.2 The classification of Vietnamese compound nouns 33
3.3 Data collection and data analysis techniques 39
CHAPTER 4:
COMPOUND NOUNS IN THE NOVEL “JANE EYRE”
EQUIVALENTS
43
4.1 General view of compound nouns in the novel ―Jane Eyre‖ 42
Trang 74.1.3.1 Compound nouns formed by juxtaposition 48 4.1.3.2 Compound nouns formed by morphological meaning 49 4.1.3.3 Compound nouns formed by syntactical meaning 49 4.1.3.4 Compound nouns formed by both morphological and
syntactical means
50
4.1.3.5 Compound nouns formed by prepositional adverb 50 4.1.4 Classification according to the componential relationship
4.1.4.1 Coordinative compound nouns
4.1.4.2 Subordinative compound nouns
50
50
50 4.1.5 Classification according to the meaning 51
4.2 Equivalence case in English compound nouns and Vietnamese
compound nouns
53
4.2.3 Noun + Verb and Verb + Noun
4.3 Non-equivalences in English compound nouns and
Vietnamese compound nouns
54
56
4.4.1 Difficulties in distinguishing compound nouns and noun
phrases and free group words
59
4.4.2 Confusion in forming plural and possessive English 61
Trang 85.4.3 Recommendations/Suggestions for further research 69
REFERENCES……… APPENDICES………
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ABSTRACT
The study aims at helping Vietnamese teachers and learners of English identify functional and structural features of compound nouns and pointing out the expressions of compound nouns in the novel "Jane Eyre" and their equivalents in Vietnamese translated version as well as providing them some suggestions for improving the teaching-learning process of English compound nouns To achieve this end, descriptive method is used to give the deep and detail description of functional and structural features of English compound nouns reference with Vietnamese equivalents Basing on the qualitative and quantitative approaches, the study has pointing out the various features of English compound nouns with reference to Vietnamese from examples extracted from the novel
"Jane Eyre" Furthermore, basing the result of survey, the author has pointed out the difficulties in learning English compound nouns at high school, so the study will provide a comprehensive and overall knowledge about functional and structural features of compound nouns in English For the students, they can learn more about morphology, especially the formation of compound nouns Besides, they will get new knowledge about types of compound nouns which appear in the novel "Jane Eyre" This thesis has focused only on studying the English compound nouns in the novel ―Jane Eyre‖ by Charlotte Bronte with reference to their Vietnamese equivalents Therefore, there are still some aspects related to this problem left for further researchers
Trang 10LIST OF TABLES
Table 3.1: Gender of the research participants
Table 4.1: The learners‘ acquisition levels on distinguishing compound nouns and noun phrases
Table 4.2: The learners‘ acquisition levels on plural features
Table 4.3: The learners‘ acquisition levels on the semantic features
Graph 4.1: Type of compound nouns
Graph 4.2: Type of compound nouns
Graph 4.3: Function of compound nouns
Trang 11LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS
1 CP: Compound nouns
2 ECNs: English compound nouns
3 GCSE: General Certificate of Secondary Education
4 VCNs: Vietnamese compound nouns
Trang 12CHAPTER 1
INTRODUCTION 1.1 Rationale
Nowadays, in the era of science and technology, language as a means of communication, has shown its great effects in many fields of our life It takes part in people‘s activities, such as economy, education, society and so on Thus, language is also considered as a decisive factor for the development process of society When a language is developed, its vocabulary is always in constant development At that time, the vocabulary is used to express new ideas, concepts
to reflect people‘s activities, characters and mentalities And enriching one‘s vocabulary of a language is very important as Wilkins (1972:111) comments:
"Without grammar, very little can be conveyed; without vocabulary nothing can
be conveyed." Besides, possessing a rich source of vocabulary in English will enable learners to speak and to write concisely, and in fact, new English words are formed in various ways such as borrowing, affixation, conversion, composition, shortening, etc Among which, compounding or composition is a rich source of English neologisms
According to an analysis of the Longman Register of new words Vol 1, it accounts for 39.8 % of new words (Ayto, in Anderman 1996:65) while a similar analysis of the Macquarie Dictionary of new words shows that it can account for 54.5% (Butler, in Ayato in Anderman 1996:66) Given, therefore, that compounding is highly productive process of word formation Moreover, compounding is an effective tool to express ideas concisely However, compound words have specific and complicated features that many learners of English find it not easy to use because compound nouns originate by coining two or more lexemes with their individual meanings in order to create a new lexeme with its new single meaning This type of word formation process is one
of the most productive and is considered to be a rich source of new English vocabulary
Besides, the words of a compound can also occur as independent words (Katamba, 1993) Meanwhile, phrase is the combination of two words which does not act as a single lexical item One word acts as the dependent (attributive), while the other acts as the independent (Giegerich, 2004) Moreover, Frank (1972) states that a noun has a function of head in every
Trang 13sentence It means that a noun has an important role to determine the meaning
of a sentence Therefore, compound nouns are more common than other types
of compounds
In fact compound nouns appear most in our daily life, especially in professional texts as in business, novels, science and technology, etc and a good
example for this is the novel ―Jane Eyre‖by Charlotte Bronte one of the most
famous was written with many compound nouns However, sometimes, the readers find it difficult to understand the fuctional and structural features as well
as expressions of compound nouns in the novels There have been a number of studies on compound nouns conducted by many researchers for suggestions dealing with compound nouns in commerce, science, technology and software computer texts but there is no fuctional and structural features on compound
nouns in the novel ―Jane Eyre‖
For those reasons, as a learner as well as an English teacher I would like
to do a research on compound nouns in the novel ―Jane Eyre‖ by Charlotte
Bronte with reference to their Vietnamese equivalents with the hope that the study could show English learners the characteristics and the usage of
compound nouns in the novel ―Jane Eyre‖ by Charlotte Bronte and help me
understand properly the features of English compound nouns and find out an appropriate way to teach them to my students
1.2 Aims and Objectives of the study
The study aims at helping Vietnamese teachers and learners of English identify functional and structural features of compound nouns as well as providing them some suggestions for improving the teaching-learning process of English compound nouns
To achieve the aims, the following objectives can be put forward:
- Providing learners some functional and structural features of English compound nouns in the novel "Jane Eyre"
- Pointing out the expressions of compound nouns in the novel "Jane Eyre" with reference to their Vietnamese equivalents
- Proposing some suggestions for improving the teaching-learning process of English compound nouns for Vietnamese teachers and learners of English
1.3 Research questions
Trang 14To fulfill the objectives mentioned above, the study tries to seek the answer to the following questions:
1 What are the functional and structural features of compound nounsin the novel "Jane Eyre"?
2 What are the semantics of compound nouns in the novel "Jane Eyre" with reference to their Vietnamese equivalents?
3 What are the suggestions to improve the teaching-learning process of English compound nouns for Vietnamese teachers and students of English?
1.4 Methods of the study
In order to complete this study, some effective and flexible combination of serveral methods research methods will be applied for finding out the functional and structural features of English and Vietnamese compound nouns
Firstly, the descriptive method is used in the first stage To give the deep and detail description of functional and structural features of English compound nouns reference with Vietnamese equivalents These features are illustrated by a list of English compound nouns taken from the reference grammar books written
by contemporary influential linguists in English as Quirk, R.et, Bauer, L (1983), Plag, I (2003) and Mgr Marie Gajzlerová (2007) and in the novel ―Jean Eyre‖ The second qualitative research is used because according to Ary et al (2002), the goal of qualitative research is the depth of understanding rather than the numerical data Moreover, ―data analysis in qualitative research is often done concurrently or simultaneously with data collection through an iterative, recursive, and dynamic process‖ (Ary et al, 2010, p 481) It means that the researcher also did the data analysis while collecting the data In addition,
―qualitative data might be quantitized by counting the number of times a particular word is used or the number of times a particular theme is identified‖ (Ary et al, 2010, p 564) That is why the researcher used frequency list to expose the data in this study This kind of study is also called mixed method because the data collection is qualitative but the data analysis is quantitative (Ary et al, 2010,
p 564)
In this research method, survey questionnaires in form of a written test is used as one of data collection methods to evaluate the participants‘ ability in understanding ECNs in terms of functional and structural features Then statistic
Trang 15method is applied to present quantitative descriptions in manageable form to simplify large amounts of data in a sensible way
In addition, at the end of research, the comparative method is used to find out the expressions of compound nouns in the novel "Jane Eyre" with reference
to Vietnamese equivalents and also made to identify the operating mechanism of compound nouns in English and Vietnamese equivalences in order that effective measures can be put forth to deal with the problems possibly arisen in using English compound nouns
1.5 Scope of the study
In the frame work of the study, the thesis only focuses on functional and
structural features of English compound nouns extracted from the novel ―Jane
Eyre‖ by Charlotte Bronte with reference to their Vietnamese equivalents
The compound nouns analyzed in this study are those formed by two words
with the data source mainly from the novel ―Jane Eyre‖ by Charlotte Bronte, not
from the dictionaries However, the theory of compound nouns are extracted from the reference grammar books by Quirk, R & Greenbaum, S (1985), Charteris-Black, J (1999), Mgr Marie Gajzlerová (2007), Lone Secher Wingreen
Christensen (2014) and especially in the novel ―Jane Eyre‖ by Charlotte Bronte
Moreover, the study collects data regarding features, the use and the translation of English compound nouns with reference to Vietnamese from the novel through survey questionnaires, so the survey questionnaires designed in this research focus primarily on the use of English compound nouns with reference to Vietnamese and on reliable data and information for research from students‘ habits in using English compound nouns The participants of the research would be eighty five students at Le Ich Moc high school who acted as significant means to collect the students‘ most common mistakes This thesis aims at providing some suggestions for improving the teaching-learning process
of English compound nouns
1.6 Significance of the study
Theoretically, the study will provide a comprehensive and overall knowledge about functional and structural features of compound nouns in English For the students, they can learn more about morphology, especially the formation of compound nouns Besides, they will get new knowledge about types of compound nouns which appear in the novel "Jane Eyre"
Trang 16Practically, through the research, teachers and students at Le Ich Moc high school can have better knowledge about English compound nouns with reference
to Vietnamese equivalents by using and translating them properly in the relevant context in their teaching and learning process in their daily life
As for future researchers, the study about compound nouns can give clear information about the types of compound nouns This analysis of compound nouns in the novel "Jane Eyre" probably can be a reference for the researchers
to conduct deeper research about a similar topic Future researchers may also conduct other compounds, for instance, compound adjectives and compound verbs
1.7 Structure of the study
The study consists of five following chapters:
Chapter I, Introduction, includes the rationale, the aims and objectives,
the research questions, the scope, the methods, the significance and the structural organization
Chapter II, Literature review, introduces previous studies related to the
thesis Also, this is an introduction to theoretical background which is designed
to serve as the basic foundation of data analysis and discussion of findings in the following chapter
Chapter III, Methodology, presents the research questions and research
approach with various methods and techniques to conduct the research thesis
Chapter IV, Findings and discussion, ―Compound nouns in the novel
―Jane Eyre‖ by Charlotte Bronte with reference to their Vietnamese equivalents‖,
describes and analyzes the functional and structural features of compound nouns
in the novel with reference to Vietnamese equivalents in order to provide some possible suggestions for improving teaching-learning process of English compound nouns for Vietnamese teachers and students of English
Chapter V, Conclusion, gives the summary of the study Furthermore, this
chapter also presents the limitations of the research and some suggestions for further studies
References
Appendices
Trang 17CHAPTER 2
LITERATURE REVIEW
In this section, previously conducted research in the detail fields of compound nouns will be presented and discussed This must be done in order to place the thesis in the context relevant to the research which will be conducted Furthermore, it will provide the readers with some basic knowledge of the background and present state of this field of research
2.1 Review of previous studies
2.1.1 Previous studies overseas
There are many previous studies in compound nouns However, they vary
in subjects and ways of analysis Therefore, each of them has a different result They provide a good ground for this research to accomplish the target
Charteris-Black, J (1999) reported that the second language learners encounter comprehension problems with compound nouns and that idiomatic, syntactic and lexicalization factor may influence their comprehension And he also pointed out that the problems come from the learner‘s word combination This problem is very similar with native speakers However, the research only focuses on the acquisition of English Neologism
Mgr Marie Gajzlerová (2007) pointed at the types and classification of English Compound Nouns and other compoundings And he also proved that ECNs had a higher frequency However the research is mainly general information
Lone Secher WingreenChristensen (2014) researched on translating compound nouns in User Manuals His study aided translators and people training to be translators in discovering the best way in which to translate CNs in technical language Although the study can only say something more specific about the 10 user manuals, which were used as the data, those user manuals should represent a good sample of the user manuals available for electric products Furthermore, the study has provided both a theoretical look at the compound nouns in the qualitative analysis, in which the use of various strategies was considered, and a more real-world look at the translation of ECNs in connection with comprehensibility in the quantitative part
Yulianita, Nadia Gitya (2015) studied on Compound Nouns in The Articles
of The Jakarta Post Online Edition Used by National and International Writers
Trang 18The researcher decided to analyze only compound nouns It is because this compound is the most common compound (Katamba,1993) Moreover, it is difficult to explore other compounds (compound verbs, compound adjectives) in the articles of a newspaper In addition, the researcher only analyzes the compound nouns which have two lexemes even though compounds can consist
of more than two lexemes It is because the researcher wants to discuss the most basic compound in English
2.1.2 Previous studies in Vietnam
Đoàn Thi Chi (2009) studied on English compound nouns and Vietnamese equivalence Her research pointed at the types of English compound and the way
of using English compound nouns of English-speaking countries in everyday conversation
Dương Thị Ngoc Anh (2009) pointed out the general information of ECNs
on classifications, form, syntactic and semantic features The study also mentioned ECNs in the book ― Hotel and tourism industry‖ However, the study was only a minor thesis, it couldn‘t prove and analysis deeply and in detail on tourism and hotel industry
Dương Thi Ngân (2010) on her minor thesis ―Compound Nouns in the novel Jean Eyre by Charlotte Bronte‖ Ho Ngoc Phuong Tram (2010) researched
on ―Compound nouns in Vietnamese focused on the descriptions of English compound nouns in the comparison to Vietnamese equivalents Bùi Thị Thảo Uyên ( 2010) Vietnamese and English Compounding, a Contrastive Analyis Nguyễn Thi Phương (2016) researched on syntactic and semantic features
of ECNs with reference to their Vietnamese equivalents The compound nouns being analyzed in this study are those that are formed from two words while the data source of the compound nouns are in some dictionaries, the reference grammar books by Quirk, R & Greenbaum, S (1985)
Great efforts of the researcher were made to find a better way of teaching and learning compound nouns However, they are all minor thesis, many other related issues cannot be discussed thoroughly Compared to those previous studies, this study will will focus on structural and functional features and
expressions of compound nouns in the novel Jean Eyre by Charlotte Bronte and
their equivalents in Vietnamese
2.2 Review of theoretical background
Trang 192.2.1 Noun in English
2.2.1.1 Definition
The term "noun" seems to be a simple concept but in fact, it quite difficult
to define In process of studying, I found some definitions of noun:
Randolph Quirk (1987:p21) defined nouns as "entities that are regarded as
stable, whether these are concrete (physical) like house, table, paper, or abstract (of the mind) like hope, botany, length"
Richard Nordquist denoted that noun is the part of speech (or word class)
that is used to name a person, place, thing, quality, or action Adjective: nominal
A noun can function as the subject or object of a verb, the object of a preposition,
In the first definition, noun was defined by meaning and in the second one; it
was defined by grammatical functions
A word used as the designation or appellation of a creature or thing, existing in fact or in thought; a substantive
"Open-class" includes noun, verb, adjective, and adverb; meanwhile, system" embraces article, demonstrative, pronoun, preposition, conjunction, and interjection
"closed-2.2.1.2 Classification
Trang 20Đỗ Thanh Loan (2003; p9) divided nouns into these following types by two ways
People: - Man, girl, boy, mother, father, child, person, teacher, student
Animals: - Horse, cat, dog, fish, ant, snake
Things: - House, book, table, chair, phone
Places: - Hospital, school, city, building, shop
Ideas: -Love, hate, idea, pride
Each part of a person‘s name is a proper noun:
- Lynne Hand - Elizabeth Helen Ruth Jones
The names of companies, organizations or trade marks:
-Microsoft - Rolls Royce - the Round Table - WWW
The names of cities and countries and words derived from those proper
nouns:
-Paris - London - New York - England - English
Geographical and Celestial Names:
-The Red Sea - Alpha Centauri - Mars
Historical events, documents, laws, and periods:
- The Civil War – the Industrial Revolution - World War I
Months, days of the week, holidays:
- Monday - Christmas - December Religions, deities, scriptures:
- God - Christ - Jehovah - Christianity - Judaism - Islam - the Bible
Awards, vehicles, vehicle models and names, brand names:
Trang 21- The Nobel Peace Prize - the Scout Movement - Ford Focus
(http: //www.learnenglish de/grammar/nounproper.htm)
Abstract nouns
An abstract noun is a noun that you cannot sense; it is the name we give to an emotion, ideal or idea They have no physical existence, you can't see, hear, touch, smell or taste them
However, in many cases, the 'thing' might be an intangible concept, which means
it is an abstract form of noun
In this instance, abstract means to exist apart from concrete existence A noun that is abstract is an aspect, concept, idea, experience, state of being, trait, quality, feeling, or other entity that cannot be experienced with the five senses E.g.:
Emotions/Feelings: love, hate, anger, peace, pride, sympathy
States/Attributes: bravery, loyalty, honesty, integrity, compassion, success Ideas/Concepts/Ideals: beliefs, dreams, justice, truth, faith
Movements/Events: progress, education, trouble, leisure, friendship
(http://yourdictionary.com/grammar-rules/Abstract-Nouns.html)
Concrete nouns
A concrete noun is the name of something or someone that we experience through our senses, sight, hearing, smell, touch or taste Most nouns are concrete nouns The opposite of a concrete noun is an abstract noun
E.g.:
Common Concrete Nouns dog, cat, girl, plate air, water etc
Countable Concrete Nouns singular -chair, computer, song, window
plural - chairs, computers, songs, windows Uncountable Concrete Nouns water, air, oil, sugar, salt, rice, cheese etc
(http://www.english-the-easy-way.com/Nouns/Concrete Nouns.htm)
Trang 22Collective nouns
In linguistics, a collective noun is a word used to define a group of objects, where objects can be people, animals, emotions, inanimate things, concepts, or other things
E.g.: A gaggle (of geese), a convoy (of lorries), a team (of football), a group (of
Classification by relationship with other components like gender, case, number:
Singular nouns and plural nouns
When a noun means one only, it is said to be singular The singular form of a noun refers to one person, place or thing
The plural form of the noun refers to two or more persons, places or things
Flower flowers
Pen pens
(http://www.lovetolearnplace.com/Grammar/singular&pluralnouns.htm)
Trang 23Countable nouns and uncountable nouns
Countable nouns are easy to recognize They are things that we can count
For example: "book" We can count books
Here are some more countable nouns:
coin, note, dollar
cup, plate, fork
table, chair, suitcase, bag
(https://www.englishclub.com/grammar/nouns-un-countable 1 htm)
Uncountable nouns are substances, concepts etc that we cannot divide into
separate elements We cannot "count" them
For example: we cannot count "sugar" We can count "bottles of sugar" or
"kilos of sugar", but we cannot count "sugar" itself
Here are some more uncountable nouns:
furniture, luggage rice, milk, butter, water
(http:// englishclub.com/grammar/nouns-un-countable 1.htm)
We usually treat uncountable nouns as singular We use a singular verb
Nouns of masculine, feminine, common and neuter gender
Masculine gender: Noun is said to be in the Masculine gender if it refers to a male character or member of a species
Man, lion, hero, boy, king, horse and actor are nouns of masculine gender
For example:
A boy is playing in the play-ground
Hero of the movie is not a native of this country
(http://www.edufind.com/english/grammar/nouns 1)
In these sentences the words ―boy‖ and ―hero" are masculine-gender nouns Feminine gender: A noun is said to be in the feminine gender if it refers to a female member of a species
Woman, lioness, heroine, girl, mare, niece, empress, cow and actress are few of
the feminine-gender nouns that we use
For example:
A girl is playing in the play-ground
Heroine of the movie is not a native of this country
(http://www.edufind.com/english/grammar/ nouns 1 )
Trang 24In these sentences the words ―girl‖ and ―heroine‖ are feminine-gender nouns
Common gender: A noun is said to be in Common gender if it refers to a member
of species which can be a male or a female
Child, student, friend, applicant, candidate, servant, member, parliamentarian
and leader are few of the common-gender nouns
For example
A child is playing in the play-ground
A Parliamentarian should have command over his language
(http://www.edufind.com/english/grammar/nouns1)
In these sentences the words, ―child‖ and ―parliamentarian‖ are nouns of common gender
Neuter gender: A noun is said to be in the neuter gender if it refers to a member
of a species which is neither a male nor a female Normally nouns referring to lifeless objects are in neuter nouns
For example:
Chair, table, tree, star, mountain, street, book, car, school, paper, pencil, computer
Here are some sentences:
Computer has brought about drastic changes in our lives
Tree is cleansing the air
Stars are not visible in the day-time
They are talking about the football team
She is a girl with blue eyes
In a sentence noun can be Subject, Direct Object, Indirect Object, Subject Complement, Object Complement, or Adverbial Here are some examples:
Trang 25Noun as Subject (S)
The speeding hotrod crashed into a telephone pole
Ron's bathroom is a disaster
The bathroom tiles are fuzzy with mold
The big, hungry, green Martian grabbed a student from the back row Around the peach trees are several buzzing bumblebees
(http: //chompchomp.com/terms/subj ect.htm)
Noun as Direct Object (Od)
They planted trees in the garden yesterday
To see magnified blood cells, Gus squinted into the microscope on the lab
table
(http: //chompchomp.com/terms/directobj ect.htm)
Noun as Indirect Object (Oi)
They bought me a book
(http: //en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Object - grammar)
Noun as Subject Complement (Cs)
She is a teacher
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subject-complement)
Noun as Object Complement (Co)
They elected him president
The people made Ambrose bishop
(http://sil.org/linguistics/ Glossary of LinguisticTerms /What is An Object Compleme nt.htm)
Noun as Adverbial (A)
Tomorrow the children will wake up early
Yesterday my mother went to work late
(languagestudy.suite101.com/article.cfm/english-nouns and noun-phrases)
2.3 An overview of English compounding
Compounding, or also equally termed composition, is one of the major English word-formation processes and also serves as an excellent source of noun formations (formations created for a single occasion) and neologisms As mentioned by Štekauer (2000, p 99) it is even often regarded as the most productive process of the English word-formation Plag (2002) also maintained this opinion Furthermore, Plag (2002, p.169) added that compounding is the
Trang 26most controversial process in English in terms of linguistic analysis This is due
to the fact that ―numerous issues remain unresolved and convincing solutions are
generally not easy to find‖ (Plag, 2002, p 169) Because of this, there is no
universal definition of compounds (Kavka and Štekauer, 2006), so an attempt to find one, which would be highly unfeasible, will not be made
2.3.1 Definitions
Adams (1973: 30) sees compound as "the result of the (fixed) combination
of two free forms, or words that have an otherwise independent existence" He
adds that compounds," though clearly composed of two elements, have the
identifying characteristics of single words"
Molhova (1976: 136) explains that ―composition is that means of forming
new words which causes two or more roots to be merged into one, whose meaning might be the sum total of the meanings of the components or it might be idiomatic‖
The probably most intuitive definition of compounding was proposed by Bauer
(1983, p 11) who described it as ―the process of putting two words together to
form a third‖ But as this definition is rather vague at first sight and would also
rule out many established compounds, need for providing a more complex one The most suitable definition for purposes of this thesis may be the treating of
compounds as free lexical units consisting of two or more roots and ―functioning
both grammatically and semantically as a single word‖ (Quirk et al., 1985, p
Hatch (1995:191) announces that it is possible to say the same thing
without the compound (e.g.:I like cakes that are chocolate or somebody can say I
like chocolate cakes) which is the reason why some people may wonder why
they should actually create compounds The reason why compounds are created
in English is stated by Hatch who says that ‗compounds are useful ways of
condensing information and they add variation to the way we refer to concepts in discourse For example, in a composition we might begin by talking about cuts in education and then later refer back to this as education cuts (1995:191)
Trang 27Compound words offer speakers new ways of referring to the same information
as well as condense the information which is why they are often used in advertisements, announcements and for newspaper headlines
Plag (2002) claims that compound is in fact a combination of no more than two elements According to his explanation, even compounds consisting of more elements can be analyzed as essentially binary structures (p 170-172)
Vogel (2007) characterises a compound as ―a vocabulary unit consisting of more
than one lexical stem (called a base) Compounds apparently include in their structure two or more lexemes, but they function as a single item with its own grammar and meaning‖ (Vogel 2007: 17)
Crystal (2009: 96) gives a more detailed definition of compound saying it is
"a linguistic unit which is composed of elements that function independently in
other circumstances" He calls these elements free morphemes claiming that
there are two or more such elements in each compound
In other words, based on Jesenská (2015:59), it can be said that compounding is a hugely productive word-formation process during which two (or more than two)
morphemes are put together to create a single form, e.g.: forget-me-not,
pickpocket, teapot, anyone etc
The authors offer comprehensible definitions and provide an explicit explanation of word composition Although the different terminology is used by
each author, e.g.: root, stem, base, element, the meaning is the same
Concluded, a compound can be defined as a combination of two or more elements If the compound is composed of more than two elements it is still analyzable into two-element structures This characteristic of compounds is called banality Other important factors that are being used to define compounds (except for the number of their constituents) are their function and meaning Units that are labeled as compounds behave as single units in regards to their syntactic and semantic function Besides, it has been received a lot of concern from linguistic scholars such as Yule(1985), Fromkin, V; Rodmar, R.; Collins P and Blair P (1998), Hornby, A.S (1995), Jackson, H & Amvela E Z (2000), Leech, G,N (1974),etc They have proposed a number of different definitions on compounding In this study the definition of Quirk et al (1985) is considered to
be of appropriate, sufficient and easy one to understand: ―Compound is a lexical
Trang 28unit consisting of more than one base and functioning both grammatically and semantically as a single word ‖ (1985:1567)
2.4 An overview of English compound nouns
2.4.1 Definitions
A compound noun is a noun that is made up of two or more words Most compound nouns in English are formed by nouns modified by other nouns or adjectives However, compound nouns are more specific and expressive than simple nouns, so they are more valuable as index terms and increase the precision in search experiments There are many definitions for the compound nouns which cause ambiguities as to whether a given continuous noun sequence
is compound noun or not We, therefore, need a clean definition of compound nouns in terms of information retrieval, according to ―Corpus-Based Learning of compound noun Indexing‖- The research was supported by Kosef special
purpose basic research (1997.9-2000.8), authors define a compound noun as ―any
continuous noun sequence that appears frequently in documents‖
In Basic English Lexicology, compounding (or words –composition) is the building of a new word by joining two or more words A compound word (or just
―compound‖ for short) is therefore a word that consists of at least two root morphemes It is clear that the components of a compound may be either simple
or derived words or even other compound words
Mark Lauer stated that ―compound nouns are a commonly occurring
construction in language consisting of a sequence of nouns, acting as a noun‖ pottery coffee mug, for example For a detailed linguistic theory of compound noun syntax andsemantics, see Levi (1978) Compound nouns are analyzed syntactically by means of the rule NN N applied recursively Compounds of more than two nouns are ambiguous in syntactic structure compounds of more than two nouns are ambiguous in syntactic structure A necessary part of producing an interpretation of a compound noun is an analysis of the attachments within the compound Syntactic 10 papers cannot choose an appropriate analysis, because attachments are not syntactically governed
O‘Grady et al (1997: 152) state that a compound noun may be formed from
a noun and a noun, an adjective and a noun, a preposition and a noun, and a
verband a noun The examples of compound nouns are fire truck, high court,
undergraduate, and jump suit
Trang 29There are two types of compound nouns as put forward by O‘Grady et al
(1997) They are endocentric and exocentric Endocentric means the right most
morpheme of a compound determine the meaning of the compound itself Since the rightmost morpheme of a compound noun is a noun, the meaning of the compound will also be a noun Besides, the meaning will be related to the rightmost morpheme itself The examples of endocentric compound are steamboat which is a kind of boat powered by steam and dog food which is food for dog From those examples, it can be seen that the meaning of those compounds are the same as the rightmost morpheme
Meanwhile, exocentric means that the rightmost morpheme of a compound
is not related to the meaning of the compound itself (O‘Grady et al, 1997) In other words, exocentric is the opposite of endocentric The common examples of exocentric compounds are Greenhouse, Bigfoot, and Broadway
According to Spencer (1991: 309), the heads of these compounds are derived by affixation from a verb The example of this type of compound is matchmaker This compound has the head ―maker‖ which is derived from the verb ―make‖ and followed by an affix ―– er‖ This compound is also called synthetic compounds
Jeremy Nicholson-Bachelor of Science of Melbourne University, Australia adds ―A compound noun is a sequence of two or more nouns comprising a noun‖ (i.e a noun phrase without determiner) In open language, and especially technical language, compound nouns are productive, in that novel instances can
be readily formed and understood in context, as attested to by Lapata and Lascaride (2003)
2.4.2 Characteristics of compound nouns
Structures:
Solid and spaced forms
Basic compound nouns (solid and spaced compounds)
The solid or spaced forms in which two usually moderately short words
appear together as one
For examples: housewife, lawsuit, wallpaper
The “solid” or “closed‖ form consists of short units that often have been
established in the language for a long time and melded together
For examples: fortlight, handmaid, crosstown, secondhand, notebook
Trang 30Open and spaced forms
The “open” or “spaced‖ form is the compound noun consisting of newer
combinations of usually long word
For examples: drug store, tea rose, road safety, dry land, human beings, post
office, etc
*Note: Sometime, a compound noun is spelt in many ways:
For examples: Nightclub = night club Airline = air line = air-line
Complex compound nouns (hyphenated and other compounds)
The hyphenated forms (as two words joined with a hyphen) in which two or more words are connected by a hyphen The hyphen is often as a visual link, so
as to make the distinction that is made in speech by stressing the first word of the compound
For examples: Mother-in-law, garden -coat, bed-foot dinning-table,
country-made shoes, frost-flowersetc
To be more specific, these are a few guidelines:
Hyphenate two nouns in apposition that indicate different but equally important function The compound constitutes a new, single idea
For examples: tractor-trailer, city-state
The compound constitutes a new, single idea
Hyphenate nouns normally written as two words, when they are precededby
a modifier which might create an ambiguity The late expression clarifying that the letter writers write for the public, rather than that they write letters that are of
a public nature
For examples: letter writer but public letter– writers
Hyphenate compound units of measurement created by combining single units that stand in a mathematical relationship to each other
For examples: kilowatt-hour, person-day
Noun-plus-gerund compounds are not hyphenated They may appear as separate or single words
For examples: shipbuilding, problem solving, decision making
- Besides, according to composition types, compounds also consist the followingcharacters:
Compounds formed by juxtaposition, without connecting elements
For examples: backache, store-keeper, door-step, heart-broken
Trang 31Compounds formed by morphological means, with vowel or consonant as
For examples: spokesman, Afro-Asian, speedometer, handicraft
Compounds formed by syntactical means, a group of words condensed intoone word
For examples: cash-and-carry, up-to-date, and up-and-up
Compounds formed both by morphological and syntactical means, phrasesturned into compounds by means of suffixes
For examples: long-legged, kind-hearted, teenager
Compound noun formed by ―prepositional adverb‖
Compound nouns formed by ―prepositional adverb‖ are those whose final element are ―preposition like adverbs‖
For examples: Teach-in, breakdown, give away, drop-out
2.4.3 Types of English compound nouns:
Considering the types of English compound nouns, many linguistic scholars give different types based on different criteria Bauer (1983) pays attention to the
part of speech of the constituents‘ combination, meanwhile Quirk et al (1972,
1985) classifies compound nouns based on the underlying structure In the latest publication, Huddleston et al (2002) divide compound nouns into two distinguish groups, namely noun-centred compound nouns and verb-centred compound nouns in which he describes both the elements‘ combination and the semantic relation analyzing underlying structure In each group of compounds, he divides them into subtypes In this study the author gives the priority to Huddleston‘s view
According to Huddleston et al (2002), a noun-centred compound noun (or verbless compound noun as called by other linguists) is a compound in
which the head is purely or at least primarily a noun For example, in girlfriend, the head friend can only be a noun
A compound, by contrast, is a verb-centred compound noun in that the head
is the lexical base of a verb or else formed from one by suffixation or conversion
For example, in bus-driver, life-guard are formed by suffixation, guard is
form by conversion and take is, of course, a verb We will look at these types in turn in the following sections
Trang 32Type of compound noun Example
cartridge
http://www.learnenglish.de/grammar/nouncompound.htm)
Note: Verb-verb compound nouns are not mentioned above because they are less common than others in language
For examples:
Make-believe = the enactment of a pretense
Make-do = something contrived to meet an urgent need or emergency
Make-work = active work of little value
Go-slow = a form of protest by workers in which they deliberately slow
down in order to cause problem from their employers
Watch-guard = short chain or ribbon attaching a pocket watch to a man's
vest
Noun-centred compound nouns:
These compounds have a noun as the final base Usually, the first constituent is the modifier and the second one is the head However, there are some cases as in coordinative, the two elements are equal In noun-centred compound nouns, the first element (the dependent) may be a noun, adjective, verb or some other categories We will look at it in turn in the following parts
Noun + noun
We often use two nouns together to mean one thing/ person/ idea, etc
When we want to give more specific information about someone or something,
we sometime use noun in front of another noun For example, we can use a noun + noun combination to say what something is made of, when something happens,
or what someone does:
Trang 33Leather jacket is a jacket made of leather
Tomato salad is a salad with tomatoes in it
Chocolate cake is cake with chocolate in them
Chicken soup is soup with chicken in it
Metal box is a box made of metal
The first noun is like an adjective It shows us what kind of thing, idea, or person, etc
For examples: bedrooms, motorbike, printer cartridge, river bank, sky-jacket,
winter clothes, traffic warden, kitchen table…
A road accident is an accident that happens on the road
The sea temperature say us the temperature of the sea
In these noun + noun structure, the first noun behaves similarly to an adjective describes or modifies the second noun
For examples:
A car park is a place for packing cars
A history book is a book of history
Importantly, the frequency of compound nouns in the previous two examples:
stomach bug, cruise ship, Sunday Times, holidaymakers When we use
compound nouns like these, the first noun has the same function as a classifying adjective- it tells or describes the nature of the second noun
Compound nouns are particularly useful in newspaper headlines and reports as they enable a lot of information to be summarized quickly
We often use noun + noun structure when the second noun is made from a verb +
―er‖
For examples:
Bus driver is a person who drives a bus
Hair dryer is a machine for drying hair
Coffee drinker is a person who drinks coffee
Tennis player is a person who plays tennis
Mountain climber is a person who climbs mountains
You are of course familiar with the noun ―book‖ and equally familiar with the noun screen used about the monitor of a computer If an author were to produce a digital novel which he or she would like to look like an ordinary book on the
screen, she might wish to produce a screen book I can hear a lot of you
Trang 34protesting that nobody in their right mind would want to read a whole novel on the screen instead holding it in their hand- in bed…We sometimes make compound nouns which consist of more than two nouns
For examples:
A dinner - party conversation
A milk chocolate bar
An air - traffic controller
Sometimes there are more than two nouns together:
―He waited at the hotel reception desk‖
―If you want to play table tennis, you need a table tennis table‖
Adjective + noun
This type often causes ambiguous for the learners as it is similar to a noun phrase in its form However, this type possesses a quite high degree of semantic specialization and lexicalization The compound, therefore, differs significantly from a syntactic construction consisting of an attributive adjective
+head noun As we have already seen blackbird is different in meaning from
black bird Many other examples of this class are: blueprint, madman, smalltalk, busybody,etc
crybaby ~ the baby cries
hangman ~ the man hangs (people sentenced to death)
pickpocket ~ person who picks (steal from) pocket
The head noun may match up with a clausal object
For examples:
punch bag ~ X punches the bag
call girl ~ X calls the girl
The noun may also stand in an adverbial relation to verb The relations
involved instrument (e.g swearword, grindstone), location (e.g bake house,
Trang 35dance hall) or time (e.g payday) with the compounds having the verbal element
in -ing suffix (i.e V-ing + Noun), they denote a purposive meaning
For examples:
chewing gum ~ gum for chewing
frying pan ~ pan for frying
Other categories + noun compounds
This type has a preposition as dependent There are also a few elements which is
a numeral or a gender-specific personal pronoun
For examples:
after - effect, backwater, off-chance, overcoat, six-pack, he-man,
she-wolf, hanger on, passer-by, breakfast, outline, afternoon
Verb-centred
In verb-centred compound nouns, the relation between constituents is similar to that between a verb and a noun phrase i.e the noun is subject or object of the verb element The dependent, therefore, is complementation rather than modification The compound nouns in this group usually consist of a verbal element in combination with a noun, an adjective, or a preposition We will look at them in turn
Noun + verb
The verb element may appear without suffix: bee-sting, bus-stop,
earth-quake, handshake, moon-walk, day dream, haircut, birth-control, waterfall, park etc The verb element may appear in -er suffix and become the deverbal
car-noun For examples: radio- operator, goal-keeper, shoes maker, city-dweller,
factory-worker This type of compounds has a relative narrow range of meanings
The whole compound often denotes the person, animal or machines perform the action expressed in the verbal element Compound nouns consist of Noun +
verballed noun in -ing such as letter-writing, book- keeping, house-keeping,
church-going, hand-writing, shop-lifting, etc and they often denote an
activity, an action or a kind of stool
Verb-adverb
Verb-adverb compound nouns are compound nouns built from a verb + an
adverb such as castaway, look-out
Verb + preposition or preposition + verb
Trang 36The compounds of this type typically denote some kind of actions
There are many examples of this type such as: walk-over, walk-out,
press-up, sit-in, take-off, show-off, drop-out, outlook, onset, overflow etc
Adjective + verb
Most compounds in this type have the ―-er‖ or ―-ing‖ suffix attached
to the verb The examples are: best-seller, high-flyer, well-being, new-coming,
shortcoming
Adverb-verb
Adverb-verb compound nouns are compound nouns built from an adverb + a
verb such as first-born, best-born
Verb + Verb
Verb-verb compound nouns compound nouns built by verbs such as washstand, make-believe
2.4.4 Classification of English compound nouns
2.4.4.1 According to the meaning
This classification can be call semantic classification‖ According to the
meaning, compounds can be non-idiomatic (motivated) or idiomatic
(nonmotivated)
Idiomatic compound nouns
Idiomatic compound nouns are those whose meanings can‘t be deduced because there is no relationship between the meanings of the components
Lack of motivation in these words is related to figurative usage of their components
For example:
monkey-bussiness = buffoonery (there is no relationship between the meanings
of ―monkey‖ and ―business‖)
teach-in = seminar, workshop ( no relationship between the meaning of ―teach‖
and ―in‖)
lady killer = A gallant who captivates the hearts of women (He makes
acquantances with many people including girls who love him very much It is true that he is a lady killer.)
Lip-service in idiom ―give lip-service to something‖ (say that one supports
something while do nothing so in reality) no relationship between the
meanings of ―lip‖ or ―service‖
Trang 37Blackleg is person who works when other workers are in strike no relationship
between the meanings of ―black‖ or ―leg‖
egghead = very intellectual person
blacksheep = person who brings shame to his family as in below
Example 1:
Jame‗s family is very famous for studiuos tradition His siblings all are studying
in universities and receives schorlarships every year But he has failed his
extrance exam to become a student He is certainly the blacksheep of his family
Because idiomatic compounds are related to figurative usage of their
components, It is very difficult for the learners to understand the meaning of
these compounds that makes learners misunderstand and confuse when speaking
with foreigners as in following examples:
Example 2
John: Nam, there is a bluebottle on the table
Nam: Yes, I know Why?
John: Bluebottles are dirty, you know?
Nam: Nonsence, I‗ve washed it carefully
In the dialogue below, the Vietnamese people make a mistake because a
bluebottle here is a fly - one kind of insect which is very dirty and causes many
diseases
In some cases, it also creates a lot of jokes and funny as in a story below:
Example 3
First women: That doctor is quite a lady-killer
Second women (not very attentive): My God! I‗d better go and see another
The second women makes a mistake when thinking that doctor is a person killing
many people, but in fact, he is a gallent who captivates the hearts of women
Example 4
―Why should one country want to be top dog over the rest of the world?‖
Top dog is the person, country, etc That is considered to be the most powerful,
influential or superior
Example 5
―Alex said nothing at all when he told him about Diana‘s misfortune He‘s a real
cold fish.” (Do you guess the meaning if you don‘t look at that situation)
Trang 38A cold fish is someone who is little moved by emotions, who is regarded
asbeing hard and unfeeling
Example 6
―Philip didn‘t tell any of the office staff why he had been absent for a month, but
then he‘s always been a dark house.‖
A dark house is a person who doesn‘t talk much to others about his activities, feelings, etc
Example 7
―The tax office had a lot of question about Frank‘s declared profits They
obviously thought there was some monkey business going on.‖
Monkey business is dishonest behavior (no relation with the word ―monkey‖)
Non-idiomatic compound nouns
Non-idiomatic compound nouns are those whose meanings are easily deduced fromthe meanings of the components:
For example: Salesgirl is the girl who sells goods
Goalkeeper is player who stands in the goal
In general, the modifier limits the meanings of the head This is most obvious indescriptive compounds, in which the modifier is used in an attributive
or appositional manner
For example: Blackboard is a particular kind of board, which is general black
In some cases, they are partially non-idiomatic since the motivation is partial
For example: Mother-in-law is mother of one‘s wife or husband
For example: ―David is a real busy bee today, he‘s been rushing around all
morning‖
A busy bee is a busy, active person who moves quickly from task to task However, in some cases, the semantic head is not explicitly expressed
For examples
A redhead is not a kind of head, but is a person with red hair
A blockhead is also not a head, but a person with a head that is as head and
unreceptive as a block (stupid)
A lion heart is not a type of heart, but a person with a heart like a lion
(in its bravery, courage, fearlessness, etc.)
2.4.4.2 Classification according to the componential relationship
Subordinative compound nouns
Trang 39Subordinative compound are those that are characterized by the domination
of one component over the other
The second component is the structural centre, the determminatum (the basic part) And the first component is the determinant (the determining one)
For example: Book-keeper distinguishes from goal-keeper
Structural centre
Book and goal are the determinant
Similarity, we can list some compound words
In the examples above, house is the structural centre (the determinant - the basic
part) We distinguish each from the others according to the determinant book,
boat, big, bake, bat
In terms of farmilies of compound, there are many sets of compounds base on the same word In such sets, the second element is the same, but its relationship with each member of its set likely tobe different
For example: schoolboy = a boy attend a school
Lowboy is not a boy who is short, is a chest of drawers not more than four
feet high
Air bed = a bed is full of air
Flower bed = is not a bed with flowers, is a place in which flowers are
growing
Similarly, we have:
Space station: use as a base for operation in space
Railway station: stopping place for trains
Police station: office of local police force
In these three examples, station is the structural centre We distinguish each from the others according to the determinant, such as space, railway, and police.In terms of families of compounds, there are many sets of compounds based on the
Trang 40same word In such sets, the second element is generic, but its relationship witheach member of its set likely to be different.For instance, we have one set of compound noun:
Steamboat is a boat propelled by steam But riverboat is not a boat propelled by a
river It is a boat used in a river
Houseboat is neither a boat propelled by a house nor a boat used on or in ahouse,
but a floating house in the form of a boat, or a boat in a form of a house, usually moored in one place
Gunboat is a boat with one or more large guns on it Rowboat is American
English for a boat that can be rowed, British English equivalence a rowing boat
In determinative compounds, the relationship is not attributive
For example:
Footstool is not a particular type of stool that is like a foot Rather, it is a stool
for one‘s foot or feet (It can be used for sitting on, but that is not its primary purpose) In a similar manner, the office manager is the manager of an office; an armchair is a chair with arms and a raincoat is a coat against the rain
These relationships, which are expresses by prepositions in English, would be expressed by grammatical case in other languages
This type of compound noun is called endocentric compounds because the semantichead is contained within the compound itself A blackboard is type of board, for example, and a footstool is a type of stool
Coordinative compound nouns
Coordinative are those whose components are both structurally and
semantically independent
For example: Actor + manager = actor-manager (actor and manager are both structurally and semantically independent)
Also, Anglo – Saxon = Anglo + Saxon ( Anglo and Saxon are both structurally
and semantically independent)
To be more clearly, see some coodinative commpounds:
willy-nilly, hoity-toity, fifty-fifty, goody-goody
These coordinative components are not numerous but we can coin many for the sake of economy:
Parent-teacher ( parent-teacher association)