Contrastive focus reduplication

This is a salad-salad, not a tuna salad[1]

Contrastive focus reduplication (also lexical cloning, the double construction) is a type of syntactic reduplication found in some languages that indicates the prototypical meaning of the repeated word or phrase, a form of retronymy. The term word word was coined by U.S. writer Paul Dickson in 1982 to describe this.[2]

The first part of the reduplicant bears contrastive intonational stress.

Examples

The authors of the original article note that a number of examples was collected in a "reduplication corpus"[3] they have gathered:[1]

The poem "After the Funeral"[5] by Billy Collins contains many examples of contrastive focus reduplication.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Ghomeshi, Jila; Jackendoff, Ray; Rosen, Nicole; & Russell, Kevin. (2004). Contrastive focus reduplication in English (the salad-salad paper). Natural Language & Linguistic Theory, 22, 307–357
  2. The Oxford Companion to the English Language. Oxford University Press. 1992. p. 1127. ISBN 0-19-214183-X.
  3. Corpus of English contrastive focus reduplications
  4. Contrastive focus reduplication in Zits
  5. ""Elusive" and "After the Funeral" by Billy Collins" (PDF). Boulevard Magazine. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-01-16. Retrieved 2014-10-26.
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