English Language: Growth of Vocabulary: Ms. Rajarajeswari. M Ms. Mohana .A
English Language: Growth of Vocabulary: Ms. Rajarajeswari. M Ms. Mohana .A
English Language: Growth of Vocabulary: Ms. Rajarajeswari. M Ms. Mohana .A
Abstract: The paper attempts to bring out the importance of vocabulary in the seventeenth century. The growth of
English vocabulary has played a vital role because every year new words appear, while others extend or change
their meaning.
1. INTRODUCTION
By the middle of the seventeenth century English Language had more or less assumed its present form so
far as grammar, spelling and pronunciation are concerned. From the Restoration onwards the chief
developments have been in the direction of an enlargement of the vocabulary on the one hand and changes
in the meaning of words on the other. As knowledge grows, so language grows with it.
The English language is the richest of all the languages and has the most extensive vocabulary. New
words have entered and enlarged the vocabulary of English. Dr. Johnson’s Dictionary of 1755 contains
some 48,000 entries while the 20th century Oxford Dictionary lists more than four hundred thousand
words. The extent of our individual vocabularies probably varies considerably from person to person. It
has been estimated that Shakespeare used about twenty thousand words and Milton eight thousand, but in
both cases, of course, the figures are deceptive. This is partly due to historic factors, partly to the genius of
the language and its readiness to absorb words from foreign tongues, or to make new ones where existing
terms are not adequate. The growth of English vocabulary has taken place mainly in the following ways.
They are
i) Imitation or Onomatopoeia.
ii) An Older word is given a new significance or its meaning is extended.
iii) A word which is normally one part of speech is used as another.
iv) Addition of Suffixes or Prefixes.
v) Abbreviation.
vi) Syncopation.
vii) Telescoping.
viii) Met analysis.
ix) Portmanteau Words.
x) Words Formed from Initials.
xi) Back-Formation.
xii) Corruption or Misunderstanding.
xiii) False Etymology.
xiv) Slang term entering literary Vocabulary
xv) Words derived from Proper Nouns.
xvi) Two words combined to form one word.
xvii) Conscious and Deliberate Coinages.
xviii) Words taken from foreign languages.
xix) Freak Formation.
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English Language: Growth of Vocabulary
i) Imitation or Onomatopoeia.
This perhaps one of the oldest, is also the crudest, methods of word-making. A number of words in our
vocabulary today, especially those, which describe some kind of sound, are obviously imitative or
onomatopoeic in character. The most representative examples are: bang, pop, buzz, click, hiss, giggle, etc.
The name of the cuckoo is clearly an attempt to represent its distinctive call and it is generally accepted
that the Latin barbarous, from which it is derived our own word barbarian, was in its origins, a verbal
imitation of the uncouth and unintelligible babbling of foreign tribes.
The word slithery has a slippery suggestion: words like blow, blast, bloat, bladder, suggests inflation, by
the inflation of the cheek when we pronounce the words. A large number of words suggesting stability
begin with the combination of st as in stop, stay, station, still, stand. But the fact that onomatopoeia can be
detected in a number of cases shows that in the past it has been one of the principles underlying word-
making.
ii) An Older word is given a new significance or its meaning is extended.
This method has been very extensively used in vocabulary building. Example: 1. The word literary now
means belonging to learning or pertaining to literature. Yet Dr. Johnson’s Dictionary does not explain the
word in this sense. At that time, it was used to mean alphabetical.
Example: 2. The word manufacture simply means to make by hand. But in modern usage, it means its
opposite now manufacture means factory – made as opposed to handmade article. Extension of meaning is
another way in which vocabulary has been enriched. Take the word, for example board. This most
common every day word originally meant a plank of wood. Now its meaning has been extended to mean
i) a table ii) the food served on a table as in the expression to pay for directors. iii) A group of people to
sit around the table as in board of directors. iv) A smooth wooden surface as in notice board, black board.
v) The deck of a ship. vi) Then, there are the various meanings of the verb to board, as in boarding a
train, ship or a plane.
iii) A word which is normally one part of speech is used as another.
It is one of the characteristics of the English language that it is possible to use the same word as noun,
verb, adjective and many other parts of speech.
Example: 1.The Noun Park means an open place for keeping cars. From this noun is coined the verb to
park meaning to drive a car to the car-park.
Example: 2. From the Noun pocket we have the verb to pocket.
Example: 3.Similar to the above examples, we elbow through a crowd, eye a person with suspicion, we
stomach insults, we face danger and so on.
Sometimes an adjective gains the sense of a noun by the omission of the substantive which is originally
qualified.
Example: 1 Submarine meaning a submarine vessel or a submarine boat.
Example: 2. The noun wireless means wireless telegraphy.
iv) Addition of Suffixes or Prefixes.
This is a very ancient method of word formation, to be found in almost every language. Here, a simple
root word is taken and a suffix is added to it.
Example:
-dom as in kingdom, freedom.
-ship as in workship, fellowship.
-less as in careless, moneyless.
-y as in healthy, sticky.
-ish as in foolish, clownish.
-ee as in employee, addressee.
-en as in lengthen, shorten.
In the present, modern age prefixes are used more intensively than suffixes.
Example:
Ambi- as in ambivalent, ambidextrous.
2. CONCLUSION
We have now distinguished nineteen chief ways in which words are formed or added to the language. But,
it may be asked, how these words come to be introduced, what the motive is behind the enlargement or
extension of the vocabulary, and what factors determine whether such additions become a permanent part
of the language or live for a while only and then become obsolete. In general it may be said that a new
word is called forth by a need for it or a consciousness that no existing word is really adequate to fill that
need: a new idea or conception is to be expressed, new institutions or new social developments and
tendencies have to be described and distinguished: new inventions or newly adopted products, fashions
etc., depends very largely upon the performance of the objects or the ideas they are used to describe.
Political and social developments, as well as religious controversies, have been the occasion for the
introduction of numerous words into the language; and it is not always possible to trace them to any one
person.
No living language is ever static; new words are constantly being added. Amongst those that have
appeared in our own language since the outbreak of war in 1939. For example, automation, beatnik, the
REFERENCES
Wood, Fredrick T. An Outline History of the English Language. Madras: The Macmillan
Company of India Limited, 1978.