English

edit
 back-formation on Wikipedia
Examples (back-formation)

Alternative forms

edit

Etymology

edit

    From back- + formation. Coined by British lexicographer and philologist, primary editor of the Oxford English Dictionary James Murray in 1888.[1]

    Pronunciation

    edit

    Noun

    edit

    back-formation (countable and uncountable, plural back-formations)

    1. (uncountable, linguistics) The process by which a new word is formed from an older word by interpreting the former as a derivative of the latter, often by removing a morpheme (real or perceived) from the older word, such as the verb burgle, formed by removing -ar (perceived as an agent-noun suffix) from burglar.
    2. (countable) A word created in this way.
      Synonym: back-form
      Back-formations, such as tambour (for “play the tambourine”), are a staple of comedic wordplay.

    Derived terms

    edit

    Translations

    edit

    See also

    edit

    References

    edit
    1. ^ “burgle”, in A New English Dictionary [] (in British English), quoted in OED, 1888, page 1186:[A back-formation from Burglar, of very recent appearance, though English law-Latin (1354) had a verb burgulāre of same meaning.]

    Further reading

    edit