Contraction (linguistics)
With contraction (from latin contra here = "contract" → "contraction"), the contraction ( contraction ) of two different or identical sounds ( and ) to a sound ( referred to), wherein the features of , and usually in unite. In part, this step was preceded by an elision .
Alternative names are Synizese , Synizesis , Syneresis (emphasis on the first e ) and Synäresis (emphasis on the ä ), the latter both from the Greek συναίρεσις synaíresis , German 'contraction' ; the opposite of this is diariesis .
meaning
Contraction means the sound contracting of two words to form a new one without changing the meaning. Often this results from frequent use of the phrase or speaking quickly (cf. Allegro way of speaking ). Colloquially in German the result of a contraction is sometimes called a melting word. The results are orthographically permissible.
Examples
- German: for that → for; with the → mit'm
- English: do not → don't; will not → won't
- French: à le → au (like to / for)
Contractions in German
Contractions often occur in German in the declination . Affected are z. B. the possessive article words our and yours :
case | Masculine | neuter | Feminine | Plural |
---|---|---|---|---|
Nominative | our yours |
us (e) re eu (e) re |
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accusative | us, ours , yours |
our yours |
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Genitive | us (e) res eu (e) res |
us (e) rer yours |
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dative | us (e) rem, our (e) rem, yours |
us (e) rer yours |
us, ours , yours |
The e- deletion also affects the inflection of adjectives to -el, -er and -en:
Ending | Neither e-redemption nor suffix shortening | e-repayment | Suffix shortening |
---|---|---|---|
-el | In adjectives with an unstressed -el , the e in front of initial suffixes is usually deleted:
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In rare cases, the e is retained, but the -en suffix is shortened:
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-he | For adjectives of German origin on -er , the e is usually retained:
Even with adjectives from non-Romance languages, the e is usually retained:
In the case of comparatives, the sequence -ereerer can result in individual cases ( a cleaner space ); such forms are avoided. |
For some adjectives the stem exit can be shortened:
According to diphthongs , the shortening is even mandatory:
The e is often deleted from adjectives from Latin or other Romance languages:
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For some adjectives, the suffix -en can be shortened to -n :
Occasionally the suffix -em can also be shortened to -m :
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-en | With adjectives ending in -en , the e of the word ending is usually retained; suffix shortening never takes place:
This also applies to participles (Partizip II):
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In poetic language, the e is occasionally deleted:
An e-repayment also occurs in the past participle:
Furthermore, an e-repayment also occurs with the comparative:
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Meaning in Greek studies
Contraction has a more specific meaning - often with the term syneresis - especially in Greek studies : There it describes the contraction of two vowels to form a syllable, often by omitting an intervening consonant . Usually this is how a diphthong is created . In ancient Greek numerous contracting verbs occur, so-called contracta Verba . Their forms are usually given uncontracted in dictionaries, while the flow text is often written as contracted. The contraction is possible with all forms of conjugation.
If the syneresis occurs in an ostentatious ( challenging ) break with language conventions, it is a rhetorical figure - namely a metaplasm .
Examples
- τιμάω timáō → τιμῶ timô (I honor)
- τιμῶ timô , τιμᾷς timâs , τιμᾷ timâ , τιμῶμεν timômen , τιμᾶτε timâte , τιμῶσι (ν) timôsi (n)
- ποιέομαι poiéomai → ποιοῦμαι poioûmai (I do for myself)
- ποιοῦμαι poioûmai , ποιῇ poiḗ [ ποιέ-ει poié-ei → ποιεῖ poieî → ποιῇ poiḗ ] ποιεῖται poieîtai , ποιούμεθα poioúmetha , ποιεῖσθε poieîsthe , ποιοῦνται poioûntai
Such syneresis can also be observed in German when speaking quickly and swallowing syllables, but without being justified in writing:
- ideal (standard language: [ideˈʔaːl] or [ideˈaːl]) contracted to [iˈde̯aːl] or [iˈdjaːl]
See also
- Clitization ( clitization )
Web links
-
Verba contracta:
- Brief overview of contraction rules (PDF, 36 kB; Classical Philology of the Albert Ludwig University of Freiburg )
- Conjugation tables for Navicula Bacchi : Active - Medium / Passive
literature
- Jörg Schuster: Introduction to Linguistics . (PDF file, 2.22 MB) LMU Munich (Center for Information and Language Processing - CIS), Munich 2003. Page 48.
Individual evidence
- ^ Duden editors: The grammar . 8th edition. Dudenverlag, Mannheim, Vienna, Zurich 2009, ISBN 978-3-411-04048-3 , pp. 365 .