Language Formality Processes

Word-Formation Processes

Process Description Examples
Neologisms Invented words that have no reference to existing words. ‘googol’ (a lexeme meaning ‘1 followed by 100 zeroes’)
Blends Amalgamations of two free morphemes, combining parts of each original morpheme. spork (spoon + fork), podcast (iPod + broadcast)
Initialisms Words formed from the initials of a sequence of words, pronounced as letters. ‘FBI’, ‘CD’, ‘USB’
Acronyms Words formed from initials of a sequence of words, pronounced as a whole word. ‘QANTAS’, ‘RAM’
Shortenings/Reductions Reduced forms of words used to save time or space, often informal. university > uni, telephone > phone
Compounding Combining two free morphemes into one new word, with no part of either morpheme lost. carport (car + port), Facebook (Face + book)
Conversion Creating a new word by changing the word class of an existing word. email (noun) > to email (verb), Google (noun) > to Google (verb)
Contractions Standardised shortenings of two words, with an apostrophe replacing omitted letters. I’ll (I will), don’t (do not)
Collocations Groups of words that frequently occur together, forming predictable associations. hustle and bustle, salt and pepper, man and wife
Borrowing Lexemes borrowed from other languages. ‘café’ (French), ‘boomerang’ (Darug), ‘algebra’ (Arabic)
Commonisation Proper nouns that broaden their meaning over time. ‘biro’, ‘kleenex’, ‘hoover’
Archaism Lexemes that have fallen out of regular use. ‘thee’ and ‘thou’ for ‘you’, ‘coney’ for ‘rabbit’

Lexical Patterning

Type Description Examples
Simple Lexical Patterning Repetition of a word in its identical form or with minor changes. ‘sing’ (first person) and ‘sings’ (third person), ‘horse’ (singular) and ‘horses’ (plural)
Complex Lexical Patterning Repeated use of words and their forms through affixation. ‘category’, ‘categorise’, ‘categorical’

Morphological Patterning

Process Description Examples
Conversion of Word Class Changing a word class, primarily through suffixes. -able (‘readable’), -er (‘teacher’)
Affixation (Nominalisation) Creating a noun from other word classes, adding stylistic patterns. -ist (‘artist’), -ism (‘ageism’)
Reduplication Repeating part of a word to form diminutives. ‘Night night’, ‘cuddle-wuddle’
Diminutives Adding a diminutive suffix to indicate intimacy or fondness. barbie (for barbeque), servo (for service station)

Phonological Patterning

Pattern Description Examples
Alliteration Repetition of a phoneme at the beginning of words. Big blue balloons
Assonance Repetition of the same vowel sound in a sequence. Save the whales!
Consonance Repetition of the same consonant sound anywhere in a sequence. red-head, willy-nilly
Onomatopoeia Words that resemble their meaning through sound. Snap, Crackle, Pop!
Rhythm (Meter) Pattern of syllables in a text, including stressed and unstressed syllables. ‘Jack fell down and broke his crown’
Rhyme Repetition of sound units at the end of lines. ‘I’m a little teapot / short and stout’

Semantic Patterning

Pattern Description Examples
Simile Comparing two things using 'like' or 'as'. White as a sheet, Sleeps like a log
Idiom Fixed expressions with meanings conveyed as a whole. It’s raining cats and dogs, Bring a plate
Pun Linguistic humour based on wordplay and lexical ambiguity. ‘Flu York City’, ‘I’m feeling effluent today’
Personification Attributing human qualities to non-human entities. The stars winked cheerfully, The computer hates me!
Animation Attributing animate qualities to non-human entities. The wind howled, The waffle leapt out of the toaster
Metaphor Equating one thing to another by transferring qualities. Love is a harsh and pure honey, You’re being such a dog
Irony Meaning is opposite to the literal interpretation of the words. ‘We are committed to excellence’
Lexical Ambiguity Potential for multiple interpretations of language. ‘Flying planes can be dangerous.’
Oxymoron Combining seemingly opposite qualities that are both true. Parting is such sweet sorrow, The living dead

Syntactical Patterning

Pattern Description Examples
Listing Placing three or more related elements together. Syntactical patterning is characterised by structures like listing, parallelisms, and antithesis…
Parallelism Structural similarity between phrases, clauses, or sentences. ‘I stand before you today the representative of a family in grief, in a country in mourning before a world in shock.’
Antithesis Contrasting ideas or phrases repeated in sequence. ‘There’s a long version and a short version.’

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