50 examples for creative respelling
Answers
Answered by
3
- Creative respelling. Sometimes words are formed by simply changing the spelling of a word that the speaker wants to relate to the new word. Product names often involve creative respelling, such as Mr. Kleen.
- Coinage is the word formation process in which a new word is created either deliberately or accidentally without using the other word formation processes and often from seemingly nothing. For example, the following list of words provides some common coinages found in everyday English: aspirin. escalator. heroin.
- There are three main types of affixes: prefixes, infixes, and suffixes. A prefix occurs at the beginning of a word or stem (sub-mit, pre-determine, un-willing); a suffix at the end (wonder-ful, depend-ent, act-ion); and an infix occurs in the middle.
- Coleman (2012) notes 'LOL', which is an initialism created from the phrase 'laughing out loud', as being a good example of a slang initialism. It can either be an abbreviation or an acronym, depending on whether you choose to spell the word out or pronouncing it like words typically are pronounced
- There are four main kinds of word formation: prefixes, suffixes, conversion and compounds.
- A blend word or portmanteau is a word made up of parts of two (or more) other words, and whose meaning combines the meanings of the two other words, e.g.: Breakfast + Lunch → Brunch. Morning meal + Midday meal → Mid-morning meal. This combination has created a new word brunch and a new meaning of mid-morning meal.
- In linguistics, clipping is the word formation process which consists in the reduction of a word to one of its parts (Marchand: 1969). Clipping is also known as "truncation" or "shortening". According to Marchand (1969), clippings are not coined as words belonging to the standard vocabulary of a language.
- In linguistics, an affix is a morpheme that is attached to a word stem to form a new word or word form. Affixes may be derivational, like English -ness and pre-, or inflectional, like English plural -s and past tense -ed. They are bound morphemes by definition; prefixes and suffixes may be separable affixes.
Attachments:
Answered by
0
Concept
Sometimes words are formed by simply changing the spelling of a word that the speaker wants to relate to the new word, it is called respelling.
To do
50 examples of creative respelling.
Explanation
The examples of creative respelling are:
- brunch
- LOL
- aspirin
- escalator
- heroin
- clippings
- pics
- freco
- hols
- uni
- helll
- sooo
- doooo
- loooove
- heeey
- ur
- urs
- plz
- hv
- goin
- gettin
- doin
- lmme
- wanna
- gotta
- outta
- cbf
- omg
- btw
- ceebs
- @
- &
- 2nite
- c
- r
- b
- 4
- gurls
- tonite
- coz
- fotos
- kool
- ASAP
- FB
- BBQ
- insta
- hehe
- haha
- mwa
- eeek
#SPJ2
Similar questions