User:Logomaniac/What is a word
This is a discussion that took place on Wiktionary's IRC channel on December 19, 2009 about what a word really is. I guess the outcome of it was that Wiktionary's current definition of word represents accurately what we thought was a word. And I'm going to start using 'quorblagging' too . . . . .
[12:00] I'm going to put about six cleanup and attention tags on [[word]]
[12:00] http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/word
[12:00] and [[phrase]]
[12:00] http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/phrase
[12:00] and [[idiomatic]]
[12:00] http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/idiomatic
[12:00] heh
[12:00] word isn't bad
[12:00] well, the first three defs anyway
[12:00] we need better definitions
[12:00] hehe
[12:00] .? word
[12:00] word — noun: 1. (linguistics) A distinct unit of language (sounds in speech or written letters) with a particular meaning, composed of one or more morphemes, and also of one or more phonemes that determine its sound pattern, 2. A distinct unit of language which is approved by some authority â[...]
[12:01] I think our definition or word is pretty good
[12:01] OK then I want a less techy-sounding one
[12:01] .? idiomatic
[12:01] I want a more techy-sounding one.
[12:01] idiomatic — adjective: 1. Pertaining or conforming to the mode of expression characteristic of a language, 2. Resembling or characteristic of an idiom
[12:01] wel, the composed of onwards is not definitino, it's clarification
[12:02] I want one that I can understand
[12:02] without several hours' worth of research
[12:02] Me too.:P
[12:02] and I don't want to move to simple.wikt
[12:02] even though razorflame keeps begging me to
[12:03] Morphemes and phonemes wouldn't take several hours. They're simple concepts.
[12:03] word: The pieces which make up a language. In Latin based languages, such as English, French, and Spanish, it is a bunch of letters separated by spaces.
[12:03] sdlksfdjk <-- but that is not a word
[12:03] An elementary school student would know that
[12:03] cirwin, "peanut butter" is a compound. There's a space in there, though.
[12:03] that's the simple.wikt defintiion
[12:04] Well, it's wrong.
[12:04] I know
[12:04] wow
[12:04] Also, "bunch"?
[12:04] a bunch of letters separated by spaces
[12:04] implies that there is at least one space in each word
[12:04] True. Didn't think of that.
[12:06] What does it say about me that as I pack to go visit family, I bring with me an SF novel, a book of absurdist plays, a grammar of Irish, an Irish dictionary, a book on data structures, and a number of papers about Irish syntax or computational implementation of syntactic theory?
[12:06] GEEEEEK
[12:06] in a freindly way
[12:06] (i.e. two of the letters have been cunningly transposed)
[12:08] By "cunningly" I assume you mean "by the cunning craft of my fingers, without my prior knowledge".
[12:08] something like that
[12:08] word: A distinct unit of language, represented by sound in speech or symbols (as letters or pictograms) in writing which is used to represent a certain quantity or idea and consists of one or more morphemes as well as one or more phonemes
[12:08] Oh yeah, and a book on linear algebra and a book of short stories in Irish.
[12:09] I dunno
[12:09] our definition needs work
[12:10] because if I use 'quorblagging' to mean ... I dunno, sleeping, it is '(linguistics) A distinct unit of language (sounds in speech or written letters) with a particular meaning, composed of one or more morphemes, and also of one or more phonemes that determine its sound pattern, ' but it is still not a word.
[12:11] Logomaniac, it's composed of one morpheme and one bit of nonsense.
[12:11] a widely recognised unit of language?
[12:11] isn't it?
[12:11] it could be
[12:11] "quorblag" is not a morpheme.
[12:11] .? morpheme
[12:11] morpheme — noun: 1. (linguistics) The smallest linguistic unit within a word that can carry a meaning, such as "un-", "break", and "-able" in the word "unbreakable"
[12:11] it has -ing
[12:12] and blag
[12:12] quorblag and -ing
[12:12] Yes, but it's not composed of morphemes. It contains one, but it isn't composed of them.
[12:12] quorblag is a nonce morpheme
[12:12] or quor is, and it has some relationship to blag
[12:12] yep
[12:12] and why is quorblag not a morpheme?
[12:12] or quor and blag
[12:13] indeed
[12:13] Cassowaries, perhaps an idiolectic morpheme, but that doesn't do anyone any good.
[12:13] It is "The smallest linguistic unit within a word that can carry a meaning, "
[12:13] What meaning does it carry, outside of your mind?
[12:13] I would interpret "quorblagging" (if it means "sleeping") as "stealing sleep"
[12:13] note can carry instead of does carry :p
[12:13] and therefore quor would mean sleep
[12:13] so I impose meaning upon it
[12:14] and therefore I impose morphemic status upon it
[12:14] mhm
[12:14] exactly
[12:14] and therefore quorblagging is a [[word]] according to our defiintion
[12:14] http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/word
[12:14] Cassowaries, but how do you come to the conclusion that it means sleeping? In certain contexts, it might be possible, but in general not.
[12:14] Leftmost, well, purely from being told
[12:14] which is inelegant, but not invalid
[12:15] how does one come to the conclusion that "sleeping" means sleeping?
[12:15] and I would be perfectly happy calling "quorblagging" a word, even if I did not know what it meant
[12:15] it's just a word I don't know
[12:15] True. So now it has word status and I see no problem with that.
[12:15] Logomaniac, language acquisition.
[12:15] but it's still not really a word
[12:15] Sure it is.
[12:15] It's not a widely-accepted word, but it's a word.
[12:16] yup
[12:16] alright then
[12:16] so there's a separate implication of "not a word" that we might want to deal with
[12:17] right
[12:17] people say, I don't know, "invalidness" is not a word
[12:17] even though it has all the hallmarks of a word
[12:17] because if I can make quorblagging a word, then what isn't a word?
[12:17] "not a word" unless appears in 3 independant places spaced by a year?
[12:17] would be useful if our defintion matched CFI :)
[12:17] :)
[12:18] Logomaniac, I mean there are therefore two meanings of 'word'
[12:18] the technical one
[12:18] I'd say quorblagging is a word, it's a nonce word
[12:18] and ... the one that says
[12:18] but not a word according to def 2
[12:18] with this meaning being something like "word (sense 1) that appears in common usage or a dictionary"
[12:19] "any string of letters that lots of people use to mean something"
[12:19] it's definitly not just letters
[12:19] yeah, this is actually before we get into the multiple definitions of "word" used just within linguistics
[12:19] alright, that was just off the top of my head
[12:19] gotta go soon
[12:20] pity,
[12:20] syntactic words, prosodic words, orthographical words
[12:20] etc etc
[12:20] I think I'll save this discussion
[12:21] yes
[12:21] good discussion
[12:21] Cassowaries, the term "prosodic word" was used repeatedly in my phonology class in the context of OT, but our professor couldn't explain it. Any help?
[12:21] so "red herring" is a word
[12:21] Mglovesfun, most definitely, but it's also two words
[12:22] depending on what definition you're using
[12:22] probably for a linguist yes, but for the common man, no
[12:22] exactly
[12:22] well, linguists just ignore spaces
[12:22] most people would tell me it's two words
[12:22] "herringbone" is one word and two words as well
[12:22] lol
[12:22] Leftmost, hmm
[12:22] my name is John
[12:22] would anyone ignore those spaces?
[12:22] Mglovesfun, we ignore the spaces and then reconstruct what the words should be
[12:23] so we'd end up with the same number of words as 'the common man'
[12:23] good one
[12:23] but in "this is a red herring", we wouldn't
[12:23] well, maybe
[12:23] see [[set phrase]]
[12:23] http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/set_phrase
[12:23] anyway
[12:24] (needs t-gloss)
[12:24] Leftmost, it's actually hard to adequately define
[12:24] I find it intuitive, though
[12:25] I (and most averaeg people you ask) would probably say "this is a red herring" is not a word, it's five words
[12:25] but it's a phrase
[12:25] "this is a red-herring" ?
[12:26] ok, then, four
[12:26] I would just say it's "four or five words"
[12:26] so not very different
[12:26] but red herring is two words which have one meaning
[12:26] red-herring <- one word
[12:26] All I have to go on, though, is "prosody" and "word". The combination of the two doesn't lead me to an immediate understanding.
[12:26] it is idiomatic then (:
[12:27] anyway, hierarchy of prosodic constituents:
[12:27] mora - syllable - foot - prosodic word - phonological phrase - intonational phrase - phonological utterance
[12:28] Ahh, so a unit composed of prosodic feet?
[12:28] yes, helpful huh
[12:28] Well, works for me.:)
[12:28] but it essentially means that "I'm" or "to go" are prosodic words
[12:29] hmm
[12:29] they happen to also be feet, and the former is also a syllable
[12:29] but you know
[12:29] Yeah.
[12:29] the latter is a syntactic word, right?
[12:29] and the former is definitely not
[12:31] .? syntactic
[12:31] syntactic — adjective: 1. Of, related to or connected with syntax
[12:31] >_>
[12:31] .? syntax
[12:31] syntax — noun: 1. A set of rules that govern how words are combined to form phrases and sentences, 2. (computing, countable) The formal rules of formulating the statements of a computer language
[12:31] right
[12:31] can I get a copy of those rules?
[12:31] haha
[12:31] do a masters in syntax
[12:31] and you'll get a fifth of them
[12:32] o_O
[12:32] um
[12:32] aren't they downloadable on the internet somewhere
[12:32] or on wikipedia
[12:32] by no means
[12:33]
[12:33] they're in your head already though
[12:33] I took a class on syntax this semester. We got a really, really brief introduction to the theory up to 1985.
[12:33] so you've already got more of a copy than linguistics has in total discovered
[12:33] right...
[12:33] *** opio has joined #wiktionary
[12:33] ok
[12:33] hello opio
[12:34] opio: Without looking at a dictionary, what do you think of as a word?
[12:34] incidentally
[12:34] I just realised I don't know whether English diphthongs are monomoraic or bimoraic
[12:34] as a word?
[12:34] my instinct is that they're bimoraic, but I don't honestly know
[12:35] uh
[12:35] well. anything that conveys meaning, i suppose
[12:35] are we differentiating between word and term?
[12:35] so you'd call "un-" a word?
[12:35] Cassowaries, hmm. I'd guess bimoraic too, but not sure.
[12:35] is 'quorblagging', which I made up to mean 'sleeping' about 15 minutes ago, a word
[12:35] i'd call un- a prefix
[12:35] but it conveys meaning, surely
[12:35] Is there any way they could be like, 1.5 morae?
[12:36] dunno
[12:36] probably not
[12:36] yes, i suppose. i guess that brings up the question 'is a prefix a word'
[12:36] I would say no
[12:36] "anything that conveys meaning", or rather the smallest thing that can convey meaning, is a morpheme
[12:36] i don't really care either way... this is one of those debates that never will get anywhere
[12:36] [[literally]]
[12:36] which can be but is not a word
[12:36] http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/literally
[12:37] *** Mglovesfun has quit ("ChatZilla 0.9.86 [Firefox 3.5.6/20091201220228]")
[12:37] anyway, Leftmost, I know languages vary on their treatment
[12:37] perhaps, then, any non-affix that conveys meaning
[12:37] and some, like Old English, have both monomoraic and bimoraic diphthongs
[12:37] or
[12:37] the things between spaces in a sentence
[12:37] there, that's a word.
[12:37] haha
[12:37] but is 'quorblagging' a word?
[12:38] it doesn't convey meaning to me
[12:38] it means 'sleeping'
[12:38] but then, neither do lots of words
[12:38] because i don't know them
[12:38] now is it a word?
[12:38] If I tell you it means 'sleeping'
[12:38] yeah, i caught that earlier
[12:38] is it a word
[12:38] yes
[12:38] not necessarily a valid one lol
[12:38] yeah
[12:38] so Logomaniac, this is the discussion we've all just had
[12:38] right
[12:38] so at least know opio is like us
[12:39] we know*
[12:39] I'm getting another opinion tho
[12:39] I dunno, it might be dangerous to have me in your group
[12:39] How about "red herring", opio? Is that a word?
[12:39] * opio tends to attract controversy
[12:39] I would call red herring a term, at first glance
[12:39] because it's two words with no hyphen
[12:39] but I don't know what a term or word is "officially"
[12:40] so you'd say "red herring" is a term, not a word
[12:40] because it's two words
[12:40] right?
[12:41] it depends
[12:41] does wiktionary include terms?
[12:41] if not, then i would modify my opinions for the purposes of this conversation :D
[12:41] but yes
[12:41] we aren't talking about wikt >_>
[12:41] alright
[12:42] Alright, I must away. Ta.
[12:42] *** Leftmost has quit ("Ex-Chat")
[12:42]