lexeme
See also: Lexeme and lexème
English
WOTD – 3 April 2007
Etymology
From Latin lexis, from Ancient Greek λέξις (léxis, “word”) + -eme, a suffix indicating a fundamental unit in some aspect of linguistic structure. Extracted from phoneme, from Ancient Greek φώνημα (phṓnēma, “sound”), from φωνέω (phōnéō, “to sound”), from φωνή (phōnḗ, “sound”).
Pronunciation
- enPR: lĕk'sēmˌ; IPA(key): /ˈ lɛkˌsiːm/
Audio (US) (file)
Noun
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lexeme (plural lexemes)
- (linguistics) The abstract unit of language that underlies the set of all words (or of all multi-word expressions) that are related through inflection of a particular shared basic form.
- Synonyms: base form, basic form, canonical form, citation form, dictionary form, headword, lemma, lexical item, semanteme
- 2003, David Crystal, The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the English Language, Second Edition, Cambridge University Press, p. 118:
- A lexeme is a unit of lexical meaning, which exists regardless of any inflectional endings it may have or the number of words it may contain. Thus, fibrillate, rain cats and dogs, and come in are all lexemes, as are elephant, jog, cholesterol, happiness, put up with, face the music, and hundreds of thousands of other meaningful items in English.
- 2014 September 25, Rochelle Lieber, Pavol Stekauer, editors, The Oxford Handbook of Derivational Morphology, page 347:
- In a typical lexicalist approach (e.g. Koontz-Garboden 2006), the unmarked lexeme is taken as lexically listed, even if its meaning (as it often does) includes templatic entailments, and the derivational morphology is taken to operate on the underived form to yield the derived form. This is the case not only morphologically, but also semantically.
- (computing) An individual instance of a continuous character sequence without spaces, used in lexical analysis (see token).
Usage notes
- A lexeme is a family of inflected forms, not a particular member of its family, although it is always designated by one of the members (the lemma).
- Since all the members of a lexeme are related by inflection, each member is the same part of speech and usually is built from the same number of words as each of the other members (e.g., "put up with" and "puts up with" each consist of three words, and both are classified as verbs).
- For a lemma that has no inflected forms, the lexeme family consists of just a single member (e.g., the lexeme beyond contains only the lemma "beyond", since English prepositions are not inflected).
Derived terms
- lexemic
Related terms
- lexical
- lexome
Translations
unit of vocabulary, set of different forms of the same lemma
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computing: continuous character sequence without spaces
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See also
- chereme
- chroneme
- grapheme
- hypheme
- lingueme
- listeme
- morpheme
- phoneme
- solideme
- term
- toneme
- word
Further reading
- Wikidata:lexeme
- "Lemma (linguistics)" on Wikipedia: Simple English.
- The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the English Language, David Crystal, on archive.org.
Romanian
Noun
lexeme n pl
- plural of lexem