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How do you say 'compound word' in esperanto?

貼文者: xBlackWolfx, 2012年3月2日

訊息: 58

語言: English

xBlackWolfx (顯示個人資料) 2012年3月2日上午8:14:26

I find it funny that the site's dictionary has no entry for 'compound word', or even 'compound', considering how often compound words appear in Esperanto. Really, the only words in Esperanto that are a single morpheme (linguistic term, go look it up if you don't know it) are the personnal pronouns and most of the prepositions. Even the name of the language is a compound word.

So how do you say 'compound word' in Esperanto anyway?

omid17 (顯示個人資料) 2012年3月2日上午8:27:23

I think 'kunmetaĵa vorto' or simply 'kunmetaĵo' is the equivalent of "compound word" in EO.

erinja (顯示個人資料) 2012年3月2日上午9:27:38

"kunmetita vorto" is a word I sometimes see.

"kunmetaĵo" is also fine, though "kunmetaĵo" can also refer to as simple combination of roots and suffixes.

Our site's dictionary isn't that wonderful. I'll add some terms with "compound"

xBlackWolfx (顯示個人資料) 2012年3月2日上午9:45:46

you can add words to that dictionary? how do you do that?

omid17 (顯示個人資料) 2012年3月2日上午10:32:03

xBlackWolfx:you can add words to that dictionary? how do you do that?
Not everyone can do it, obviously. She is a moderator.

erinja (顯示個人資料) 2012年3月2日上午10:37:08

You can request dictionary editing rights if you want to help with the dictionary. Any lernu user can request these rights, not just moderators.

I recommend it only if you have a good dictionary that you can take definitions from, or if you speak Esperanto well.

If you are looking for a word and it's missing from the dictionary, please do report that, and we can add it. "compound", for example, is an important word to be missing from the dictionary!

sudanglo (顯示個人資料) 2012年3月2日上午11:17:01

xBlackWolfx:Really, the only words in Esperanto that are a single morpheme (linguistic term, go look it up if you don't know it) are the personal pronouns and most of the prepositions.
The list, in terms of categories is a bit broader than that.

It also includes adverbs (tre, tro), correlatives (kiu tiu etc), numbers (unu du etc), an article (la), conjunctions (kaj, dum), interjections (Fi, Ve,) and possibly some others.

Erinja, when you are doing the dictionary, stick something in for compound interest and prison/military compound.

xBlackWolfx (顯示個人資料) 2012年3月2日下午12:58:52

i didnt count the correlatives since they are...'modular'. okay, none of the parts can act on their own, but each part does carry a meaning to it. for example, all correlatives that begin with ki- mark an interrogative pronoun, and all the ones that end in -e have something to do with place (kie: what place/where, tie: that place/there, cxie: all places/everywhere, ie: some place/somewhere, etc...)

edit: and no i dont need the rights to modify the dictionary, the only dictionary i have in my possession is in a phrase book.

xBlackWolfx (顯示個人資料) 2012年3月2日下午6:03:46

How do I report words anyway? Because I just thougt up another one: scare-crow.

sudanglo (顯示個人資料) 2012年3月2日下午8:37:35

Wells gives birdotimigilo and there is an article in Vikipedio under this heading.

However, there's a distinction to be made here.

There are birdscaring devices, these seem to be properly timigiloj, and there is the classic scarecrow.

I think you could say birdtimigulo or birdtim-figuro, but more economically simply bird-timulo.

There is a principle in Esperanto word construction that you include the elements which seem necessary, but just enough of them to be sufficient to convey the meaning.

Arguably you don't need the -ig in this compound since, it seems unlikely that birdtimulo would be interpreted as somebody who was scared of birds - certainly not in birdtim-figuro since how would a figuro be scared of birds.

For the device however, my lingvo-sento tells me that the -ig is necessary.

Wells also offers ĉifon-figuro but this could be a Guy Fawkes.

Pajlo-homo (straw-man) could also be something whose primary function was not keeping birds off the crops.

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