Everything about Productivity Linguistics totally explained
In
linguistics,
productivity is the degree to which
native speakers use a particular grammatical process, especially in
word formation. Since use to produce novel (new, non-established) structures is the clearest proof of usage of a grammatical process, the evidence most often appealed to as establishing productivity is the appearance of novel forms of the type the process leads one to expect, and many people would limit the definition offered above to exclude use of a grammatical process that doesn't result in a novel structure. Thus in practice, and, for many, in theory, productivity is the degree to which native speakers use a particular grammatical process
for the formation of novel structures. A productive grammatical process defines an
open class, one which admits new words or forms. Non-productive grammatical processes may be seen as operative within
closed classes, but only previously formed and learned structures show the results of those processes.
In standard
English, the formation of
preterite and past
participle forms of
verbs by means of
ablaut (for example,
sing–
sang–
sung) is no longer considered productive. Newly coined verbs in English overwhelmingly use the ending
-ed for the past tense and past participle (for example,
spammed,
e-mailed). There are more recent ablaut forms, however—for example
snuck as the preterite and participial form of
sneak, or
dove as the preterite of
dive. Such cases are standardly said to have been created by
analogy instead of by productive application of ablaut rules, though this may to some extent be
begging the question. Similarly, the only clearly productive
plural ending is
-(e)s; it's found on the vast majority of English
count nouns and is the almost exclusive means used to form the plurals of neologisms, such as
FAQs and
Muggles. The ending
-en, on the other hand, is (at least relatively speaking) no longer productive, being found only in
oxen,
children, and the now-rare
brethren. In the
hacker sociolect, however, the plural
-en became at least ephemerally productive for words ending with /-ks/ (on the
analogy of
ox:
oxen), as illustrated by the plurals
VAXen,
unixen and
emacsen, for example.
Productivity is, as stated above and implied in the examples already discussed, a matter of degree, and there are a number of areas in which that may be shown to be true. As the example of
-en becoming productive shows, what has apparently been non-productive for many decades or even centuries may suddenly come to some degree of productive life, and it may do so in certain dialects or sociolects while not in others, or in certain parts of the vocabulary but not others. Some patterns are only very rarely productive, others may be used by a typical native speaker several times a year or month, whereas others (especially
syntactic processes) may be used productively dozens or hundreds of times in a typical day. It isn't untypical for more than one pattern with similar functions to be comparably productive, to the point that a speaker can be in a quandary as to which form to use —for example, would it be better to say that a taste or color like that of raisins is
raisinish,
raisiny,
raisinlike, or even
raisinly? (All four can be found on the Internet.)
It can also be very difficult to assess when a given usage is productive or when a person is using a form that has already been learned as a whole. Suppose a reader comes across an unknown word such as
despisement meaning 'an attitude of despising'. The reader may apply the Verb+
ment noun-formational process to understand the word perfectly well, and this would be a kind of productive use. This would be essentially independent of whether or not the writer had also used the same process productively in coining the term, or whether he or she'd learned the form from previous usage (as most English speakers have learned
government, for instance), and no longer needed to apply the process productively in order to use the word. Similarly a speaker or writer's use of words like
raisinish or
raisiny may or may not involve productive application of the Noun+
ish and Noun+
y rules, and the same is true of a hearer or reader's understanding of them. But it won't necessarily be at all clear to an outside observer, or even to the speaker and hearer themselves, whether the form was already learnt and whether the rules were applied or not.
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