Composite colour strings in English: adjectival or nominal?

This paper looks into the category membership of colour words that enter into combination with modifiers like bright, dark, light, or pale. The English grammatical literature usually assumes that these ‘composite colour strings’, used attributively or predicatively, form adjective-adjective compound...

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Main Authors: Philippe De Brabanter, Saghie Sharifzadeh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Université Jean Moulin - Lyon 3 2020-06-01
Series:Lexis: Journal in English Lexicology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/lexis/4366
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author Philippe De Brabanter
Saghie Sharifzadeh
author_facet Philippe De Brabanter
Saghie Sharifzadeh
author_sort Philippe De Brabanter
collection DOAJ
description This paper looks into the category membership of colour words that enter into combination with modifiers like bright, dark, light, or pale. The English grammatical literature usually assumes that these ‘composite colour strings’, used attributively or predicatively, form adjective-adjective compounds. Closer scrutiny, however, reveals difficulties with this view. First, it is unusual for adjectives to modify adjectives. Second, even if they are compounds, it is unusual for their comparative and superlative inflections to be marked not on the head of the structure, but internally on the modifier, as in brighter red. These difficulties lead us to question the compoundhood of those strings, but also to explore the possibility that, at least in some predicative and attributive uses, the colour words in them are nouns. Using data from the BNC and COCA, we test our intuitions and those found in the literature. We conclude that the adjective-adjective compound analysis of composite colour strings cannot be generalised to all predicative and attributive uses. In at least some of those, the colour word is a noun. In some other cases, it may not be possible to decide if the colour word is a noun or an adjective.
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series Lexis: Journal in English Lexicology
spelling doaj-art-13eedb45cb1e4487aed626ac72da13a32025-08-20T02:32:41ZengUniversité Jean Moulin - Lyon 3Lexis: Journal in English Lexicology1951-62152020-06-011510.4000/lexis.4366Composite colour strings in English: adjectival or nominal?Philippe De BrabanterSaghie SharifzadehThis paper looks into the category membership of colour words that enter into combination with modifiers like bright, dark, light, or pale. The English grammatical literature usually assumes that these ‘composite colour strings’, used attributively or predicatively, form adjective-adjective compounds. Closer scrutiny, however, reveals difficulties with this view. First, it is unusual for adjectives to modify adjectives. Second, even if they are compounds, it is unusual for their comparative and superlative inflections to be marked not on the head of the structure, but internally on the modifier, as in brighter red. These difficulties lead us to question the compoundhood of those strings, but also to explore the possibility that, at least in some predicative and attributive uses, the colour words in them are nouns. Using data from the BNC and COCA, we test our intuitions and those found in the literature. We conclude that the adjective-adjective compound analysis of composite colour strings cannot be generalised to all predicative and attributive uses. In at least some of those, the colour word is a noun. In some other cases, it may not be possible to decide if the colour word is a noun or an adjective.https://journals.openedition.org/lexis/4366lexical categorycolour termsadjectival compoundpredicative useattributive use
spellingShingle Philippe De Brabanter
Saghie Sharifzadeh
Composite colour strings in English: adjectival or nominal?
Lexis: Journal in English Lexicology
lexical category
colour terms
adjectival compound
predicative use
attributive use
title Composite colour strings in English: adjectival or nominal?
title_full Composite colour strings in English: adjectival or nominal?
title_fullStr Composite colour strings in English: adjectival or nominal?
title_full_unstemmed Composite colour strings in English: adjectival or nominal?
title_short Composite colour strings in English: adjectival or nominal?
title_sort composite colour strings in english adjectival or nominal
topic lexical category
colour terms
adjectival compound
predicative use
attributive use
url https://journals.openedition.org/lexis/4366
work_keys_str_mv AT philippedebrabanter compositecolourstringsinenglishadjectivalornominal
AT saghiesharifzadeh compositecolourstringsinenglishadjectivalornominal