Neoclassical compound
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
Neoclassical compounds are special words made by joining parts from classical languages, such as Latin or ancient Greek. These parts can act like prefixes or stems, helping to build new words. For example, the Greek word bio- means "life," and when it combines with the suffix -graphy, which means "writing or recording," we get the word biography. This way of creating words is very common in science and technology.
Neo-Latin, which includes many of these compound words, plays an important role in the technical and scientific vocabulary of English and other languages. These compounds come from an international scientific vocabulary that helps scientists all over the world understand each other better. This method of building words from classical roots helps make complex ideas easier to share and discuss across different languages and fields.
Source of international technical vocabulary
Main article: International scientific vocabulary
Neoclassical compounds are important special words used in science and technology. These words come from old languages like Latin and Greek. Because of this, these words are used in many different languages. This makes them easier for people to understand, even if they only know a little of the language.
Not all European languages use these words the same way. For example, German and Russian sometimes make their own words. But often, people still use common international words, like "Telefon" for telephones, even if there is a special word in their own language.
Formation, spelling, and pronunciation
Main article: Traditional English pronunciation of Latin
These words are made by joining parts of Latin and Ancient Greek words. Ancient Greek words are written in English letters. For example, Ancient Greek αι becomes e or ae in English.
Some Ancient Greek sounds change when they become English words. For instance, Ancient Greek θ becomes th, and κ becomes c or k. These changes can make some words hard to pronounce because they have unusual letter combinations.
History and reception
English began using many special words in the 1500s. For example, the word geography first appeared in English writing in 1535. Other old words we still use today include mystagogue from the 1540s and androgyne from the 1550s. Even ways of telling the future, called divination, got their names from these special words. One example is alectryomancy, which means telling the future by watching chickens peck.
Not everyone liked adding so many classical words to English. A writer named Sir John Cheke from the 1500s thought English should stay simple and not borrow words from other languages. He called these borrowed words "inkhorn terms". Much later, in the 1800s, a writer named William Barnes tried to use only old English words instead. For example, he called a photograph a "sun-print". Some of his ideas caught on, like using foreword instead of preface. A fun piece called Uncleftish Beholding by Poul Anderson tried to describe nuclear physics using only old English words. To learn more, see Linguistic purism in English.
More recent developments
Many words like thermometer, dinosaur, rhinoceros, and rhododendron are often used in English. Sometimes these words get shorter, like calling a rhinoceros a "rhino." In science, when naming new animals, the group’s name often becomes the common word.
In the metric system, parts that make numbers bigger, like in "kilogram," usually come from Greek. Parts that make numbers smaller, like in "millimeter," come from Latin. These parts are also added to English words, creating terms like gigabyte. Mixing Latin and Greek parts in words used to be seen as wrong, but now it is more accepted. Fun mixes appear in science, like the dinosaur Yangchuanosaurus. Some science names even include personal names, like Fuchsia.
Sometimes these special word combinations are used to make everyday topics sound more important, like calling the study of beauty "cosmetology," though it won’t help you become an astronaut. They can also be used for fun, like "odontopodology," which means putting your foot in your mouth. Some of these fun words, like garbology, the study of garbage, have become real terms.
Some of these special words have special plural forms, while others follow normal English rules.
Translation
Many English words are made by joining parts from ancient Greek and Latin. These parts often cannot be used alone, but sometimes they are, like using "bio" for "life" or "telly" for "television". Most of these word parts have simple meanings, such as "bio-" meaning "life" and "-graphy" meaning "writing or describing".
Because of this, words made from these parts can often be understood easily. For example, "biography" means "writing about a life", and "neurology" means "the study of the nervous system". Some parts can be used at the beginning or end of a word. For example, "autobiography" has "auto-" (self) and "bio-" (life) at the start, and "-graphy" (writing) at the end. Sometimes the same part can be used in different places, like "-graph-" in "graphology" (study of handwriting) and "monograph" (a detailed written study). Occasionally, a word repeats a part, like "logology" (the study of words) or "phobophobia" (fear of fear).
Preposed and postposed
Prefixes are parts added to the beginning of words, such as "aero-" for air, "crypto-" for hidden, "demo-" for people, "geo-" for earth, "odonto-" for tooth, "ornitho-" for bird, and "thalasso-" for sea. Some prefixes have both old and new meanings. For example, in "biology", "bio-" means "life", but in "bio-degradable" it means "living things".
When a word part is used alone today, it is usually a shorter form of a longer word, like "bio" for "biography", "chemo" for "chemotherapy", "hydro" for "hydroelectricity", and "metro" for "metropolitan area". Some of these shorter forms are even shorter than the original word part, like "ginie" for "gynecology" and "anthro" for "anthropology".
Suffixes are parts added to the end of words, such as "-ectomy" for cutting out, "-graphy" for writing or describing, "-kinesis" for motion, "-logy" for study, "-mancy" for guessing the future, "-onym" for name, "-phagy" for eating, "-phony" for sound, "-therapy" for healing, and "-tomy" for cutting. These suffixes are often listed in dictionaries without extra letters, but we sometimes add them in everyday speech, like saying "ologies and isms".
Variants
Some word parts have different forms of the same idea. Some of these parts can also be used as whole words, like "mania" in "dipsomania" (extreme thirst) and "phobia" in "claustrophobia" (fear of tight spaces).
Some word parts are made from other parts, like "encephalo-" for brain, which comes from "en-" (in) and "-cephal-" (head). Another example is "-ectomy" for cutting out, which comes from "ec-" (out), "-tom-" (cut), and "-y" (a word-ending meaning "process").
Formation
In Greek and Latin, word parts usually need an extra letter to connect them. In "biography", the extra letter is "-o-"; in "agriculture", it is "-i-". In English, this extra letter is called an interfix. For example, in "biology", the interfix is "-o-"; in "miniskirt", the interfix is "-i-". This letter is usually added to the first part of the word, like "bio-" or "mini-", but sometimes it is considered part of the second part, especially if that part is stressed, like in "-ography" or "-ology". If the second part starts with a vowel, like "-archy" in "monarchy", the extra letter is usually not used, but sometimes it is kept, especially with a hyphen, like in "auto-analysis", "bioenergy", and "hydroelectricity".
Origin
English got most of its words made from Greek and Latin in three ways: through French from Latin and Greek, directly from Latin and Greek, and by creating new words in English using Greek and Latin patterns. One exception is "schizophrenia", which came into English through German.
Main article: bio-degradable
Further information: bioenergy, hydroelectricity
Terminological variation
Most dictionaries use the term combining form for parts of words that come from ancient Greek or Latin. These parts can be at the start or end of a word and help make new meanings. For example, in the word biography, bio- means "life" and -graphy means "writing."
These combining forms work more like words (nouns, adjectives, verbs) instead of grammar tools like prepositions. Some guides also call them stems because they give words their main meaning. Even though they are very old and important for making words, they work differently from regular word roots. For instance, in autograph, -graph acts as both a root and a combining form.
Philology
Conservative philological tradition
From the Renaissance until the mid-20th century, people tried to keep classical compounds pure. This meant using Greek parts with Greek parts and Latin parts with Latin parts. They tried not to mix them. For example, the word biography comes from Greek, while agriculture comes from Latin. But this rule wasn’t always followed. The word television, for example, mixes Greek tele- with Latin -vision, likely because the pure form telescope was already used for something else.
Contemporary developments
For a long time, from the 16th century to the early 20th century, classical compounds were used mostly by people who studied classical languages. These compounds were mainly used in technical fields and not in everyday language. But as classical education declined and technical words became more common in media, the way these compounds are used has changed in several ways.
Pure classical usage
In older sciences, classical parts were used to create strictly Greek compounds such as anthocyanin, astrobleme, chemotherapy, chronobiology, cytokinesis, glossolalia, narcolepsy, osteoporosis, Pliohippus, and sympathomimetic.
Hybrid classical usage
In technical and semi-technical fields, people began to mix Latin and Greek parts more freely. This created words like accelerometer, aero-generator, bioprospector, communicology, electroconductive, futurology, mammography, micro-gravity, neoliberal, Scientology, and servomechanism.
Hybrid classical/vernacular usage
In the later 20th century, many classical parts were used in more everyday ways. For example, crypto- as in Crypto-Fascist and pseudo- as in pseudoradical; or -meter in speedometer and clapometer. New words were also created by comparing them to existing ones, like petrodollar from petrochemical, or microwave from microscope. These words were often made to be short and catchy rather than perfectly precise.
Combining forms as separate words
Recently, the way these words are written has changed, but they still sound the same. For example, micro-missile, micro missile, and micromissile are all ways to write the same word. Words like Hydro substation or Metro highways also show this mixing of parts.
New classical compounds
New kinds of words appeared in the late 20th century, including:
- Established forms like econo- from ‘economic’, as in econometric or Econo-Car; mini- from ‘miniature’, as in miniskirt or mini-boom; and -matic from ‘automatic’, as in Adjustamatic or Instamatic.
- Less common forms made by blending words, like accu- from ‘accurate’ in Accuvision; compu- from ‘computer’ in Compucorp; docu- from ‘documentary’ in docudrama; and perma- from ‘permanent’ in permafrost.
- Informal words that sound classical, like Easibird, Healthitone, Redi-pak, and Relax-A-Cizor.
Similar systems
Main article: Sino-Xenic vocabularies
In East Asia, Chinese has been important, like Latin and Greek in Europe. Many languages not from China have taken words from Chinese. They also use Chinese parts to make new words, especially in formal or technical language.
This is very clear in Japanese. These words are called wasei kango (Japanese-made Chinese words). These words are also used in Chinese and Korean. They sound different but use the same characters. For example, 自動車 (Japanese jidōsha, Korean jadongcha, Mandarin zìdòngchē) means "automobile", which really means "self-move-car". This is like how European languages use parts like auto (self) and mobile (moving) to make words.
Related articles
This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Neoclassical compound, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.
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