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Meaning of univerbation | Babel Free

Noun CEFR C1
/ˌjynɪvɜˈbeʃən/

Definitions

  1. The diachronic process of forming a new single word from a fixed expression of several words.
    countable, uncountable
  2. A new word formed by this process.
    countable, uncountable

Equivalents

العربية نحت
Čeština univerbizace
Español univerbación
Français univerbation
Italiano univerbazione
Nederlands univerbering
Polski uniwerbizacja
Русский универба́ция

Examples

“Lexicalization and grammaticization compared In Section 3, it was pointed out that there are two kinds of lexicalization which can be usefully compared with grammaticization, i.e. fossilization and univerbation. The discussion and examples in this section will be confined to the more general and widespread of these two types, i.e. univerbation (the emergence of new lexical entries from collocations), primarily in order to keep the presentation simple and straightforward.”
“Standard examples of univerbation are cupboard, brainstorming, or necklace.”
“This process is referred to as univerbation. An example from English is the word notwithstanding, which derives historically from the word not and the participle withstanding. In modern English it counts as a single word, namely, as a preposition, as in the prepositional phrase notwithstanding his request (compare the ungrammatical withstanding his request). Further examples are the conjunction because from Middle-English bi + cause 'by cause of', parallel to French par cause […]”

CEFR level

C1
Advanced
This word is part of the CEFR C1 vocabulary — advanced level.

See also

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