Paul Crowley (
ciphergoth) wrote2002-09-24 11:37 pm
Autonomic words
To quote an earlier LJ comment of mine:
Some adjectives describe other words. "Bisyllabic" is an example, it describes words like "butter" and "football", but not "peg" or "antidisestablishmentarianism".
Some such adjectives have the weird property that they describe themselves: the best example I know of is "pentasyllabic". We'll call such adjectives "autonomic", because they name themselves.
What other autonomic words can you think of? So far we've thought of "sesquipedalian" and "short", and I'm sure there's a suitable word that means "word taken from another language" but I can't remember what it is. Any ideas?
Some adjectives describe other words. "Bisyllabic" is an example, it describes words like "butter" and "football", but not "peg" or "antidisestablishmentarianism".
Some such adjectives have the weird property that they describe themselves: the best example I know of is "pentasyllabic". We'll call such adjectives "autonomic", because they name themselves.
What other autonomic words can you think of? So far we've thought of "sesquipedalian" and "short", and I'm sure there's a suitable word that means "word taken from another language" but I can't remember what it is. Any ideas?

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"calque"
Etymology: French, literally, copy, from calquer to trace, from Italian calcare to trample, trace, from Latin, to trample
How about "noun" and "adjectival"?
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a few more...
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But aside from Bertrand-Russell-style semantics, how about: word, finite, concept (or conceptual, since you prefer adjectives), understandable, readable, common, senescent, extant.
[Oh, sorry, I know avaritia if you were wondering who I am]
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It's always annoyed me that palindrome isn't a palindrome, and that anagram isn't a decent anagram of anything.
I'm off to yell "interjection!" at someone.
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