Arabic-L:LING:term for basic form of words responses
Dilworth Parkinson
dilworth_parkinson at byu.edu
Wed Jun 23 21:22:18 UTC 2004
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Arabic-L: Wed 23 Jun 2004
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1) Subject:term for basic form of words response
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1)
Date: 23 Jun 2004
From:timbuckwalter at qamus.org
Subject:term for basic form of words response
The term you're looking for is the dictionary "citation/canonical form,"
which, as you mentioned, is often the uninflected or most "basic" form
of the word. The term "lemma" (pl. -s or lemmata) is also used, and
"lemmatization" is the process of identifying and grouping all the
inflected forms of a dictionary "head word" or "lemma."
Tim Buckwalter
Philadelphia
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2)
Date: 23 Jun 2004
From:gunvor.mejdell at east.uio.no
Subject:term for basic form of words response
What about 'lexical (entry)form' ?
G. Mejdell, Oslo
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3)
Date: 23 Jun 2004
From:jmurg at ttlc.net
Subject:term for basic form of words response
Munther, I think lexicographers say "lemma," and we regular folks say
"citation form." Of course, these are also stems, but it's a matter of
convention *which* stem is used as the dictionary entry form, as you
pointed
out. I look forward to finding out what the term is in Arabic.
Best regards,
Jackie Murgida
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4)
Date: 23 Jun 2004
From:enm at umich.edu
Subject:term for basic form of words response
Dear Professor Younes:
I would recommend that you refer to the lexemes you mentioned as their
"citation forms".
Ernest McCarus
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5)
Date: 23 Jun 2004
From:mabessatar at yahoo.com
Subject:term for basic form of words response
Hi
What about "citation form", isn't it a bit more neutral?
Abdessatar Mahfoudhi
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6)
Date: 23 Jun 2004
From:dwilmsen at aucegypt.edu
Subject:term for basic form of words response
Call it the citation form
or the entry term, or the headword
David Wilmsen
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7)
Date: 23 Jun 2004
From:Michael.Schub at trincoll.edu
Subject:term for basic form of words response
May I suggest "verbum:" The Latin translation of John 1.1 "In the
beginning was the word (Greek: logos)" is "verbum," which is also a
nice parallel to the Qur'an's /kalima/.
Mike
Schub
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8)
Date: 23 Jun 2004
From:Michael.Schub at trincoll.edu
Subject:term for basic form of words response
Dear Munthir,
On second and third thought, "verbum," plural "verba" might also
be expressed as "entry" (pl. "entries"), as in a dictionary entry.
(3) "camel" (pl. "camels") conflates /kaamil/ = "perfect,
complete," /kalima/ = "word," and a ubiquitous cultural icon.
Best wishes,
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9)
Date: 23 Jun 2004
From:Tom Emerson <tree at basistech.com>
Subject:term for basic form of words response
Munther Younes asks:
[...]
> The term "basic word" or "basic form", doesn't work well,
> because "basic" is often used to refer to Form I verbs as opposed to
> the derived verb forms. "Stem" wouldn't work either, because it is
> often used to refer to that part of the word (often an
> unpronounceable sequence) that excludes certain suffixes and
> prefixes.
I think 'stem' is a perfectly valid term for this. Indeed, there is
precedent for it in both Erwin's "A Short Reference Grammar of Iraqi
Arabic" and Badawi et al.'s "Modern Written Arabic: A Comprehensive
Grammar". In each case the stem is viewed as the appropriately
vocalized root with inflectional affixation removed. So, for example,
taSaffaH is a stem representing the application of form V to the
triliteral root SfH. It seems (to me at least) that your definition
for 'stem' is is appropriate to your need.
-tree
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10)
Date: 23 Jun 2004
From:Nori Heikkinen <nori+arabic-l at maenad.net>
Subject:term for basic form of words response
How about "lemma"? from gcide:
main entry word \main entry word\ n.
The form of a word that heads a lexical entry and is
alphabetized in a dictionary; also called {entry word},
{headword}, and {lemma}.
Syn: citation form, entry word, headword, lemma.
[WordNet 1.5]
Note: In different languages, different wordforms, such as
cases for verbs, may be taken as the main entry word.
In English dictionaries, it is the infinitive form, but
in latin dictionaries it is usually the first person
singular present.
[PJC]
</nori>
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