罗曼语中的工具名词和地方名词

F. Rainer
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摘要

即使是最原始的狩猎采集者偶尔也不得不给工具和地点命名,从那时起,随着人类文化的发展,对工具和地点名词的需求也随之增长。因此,难怪世界上大多数语言,其中包括拉丁语和罗曼语,都有这种特殊的构词法。与构词法的其他类别一样,那些与工具名词和地方名词相关的词并不构成概念上同质的集合,而是概念上相关的子类别的集合。工具名词包括从简单的工具和小工具到复杂的机器的对象,但也可以表示不太典型的工具对象,如化学物质或衣服和盔甲,以及更抽象的实体,通常被称为手段。地名,反过来,涵盖了各种各样的子类别,如地形,田野和树林,洞穴,摊位和其他建筑物,国家,地区和城镇。容器代表了介于工具和地方名词之间的一类:例如,墨水瓶是一种设计用来容纳墨水的人工制品,与工具很接近,但也可以被视为储存墨水的地方。工具名词和地点名词都可以作为名词和动词的基础,很少用作形容词。这两个类别的描述基本上适用于拉丁语和罗曼语。在这里所考虑的整个时期,地点名词的范畴在概念层面上保持相对稳定,尽管可以观察到个别后缀的许多变化。相比之下,在科学和工业革命之后,工具名词遭受了重大改革。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Instrument and Place Nouns in the Romance Languages
Even the most primitive hunter-gatherers occasionally had to give names to tools and places, and the need for instrument and place nouns has grown ever since in tandem with the unfolding of human culture. It is therefore no wonder that the majority of languages of the world, among them Latin and the Romance languages, have specific patterns of word formation to this effect. As is the case with other categories of word formation, those referred to with instrument noun and place noun do not constitute conceptually homogeneous sets, but sets of conceptually related subcategories. Instrument nouns comprise objects that can range from simple tools and gadgets to complex machines, but can also represent less prototypically instrumental objects like chemical substances or pieces of clothing and armor, as well as more abstract entities that are often referred to as means. Place names, in turn, cover subcategories as diverse as terrains, fields and groves, burrows, stalls and other buildings, countries, regions, and towns. Vessels represent a category located halfway between instrument and place nouns: an inkpot, for example, is an artifact designed to contain ink and as such close to an instrument, but can also be viewed as a place where ink is stored. Both instrument and place nouns can take as bases nouns and verbs, more rarely adjectives. This description of the two categories is essentially valid for both Latin and Romance. The category of place nouns has remained relatively stable at the conceptual level throughout the period considered here, although many changes can be observed for individual suffixes. Instrument nouns, by contrast, have suffered a major overhaul in the wake of the scientific and industrial revolutions.
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