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This article's factual accuracy is disputed. Please see the relevant discussion on the talk page. (March 2008) |
A set phrase is an expression (i.e. term or phrase) whose parts are fixed (see examples below). It is often possible to express the idea conveyed by a set phrase with a different phrasing, but it is marked to do so.
Two-word set phrases arise during the generative formation of English nouns. Such set phrases represent an early stage in the process of noun compounding, signalled solely through word stress. In English, the rules for noun stress place stress away from the end (i.e., not on the last syllable). Following this pattern, compound nouns in English receive stress on the first word in the compound, not the last: something, greenhouse, mousetrap.
The set phrase is a compound noun in-the-making. Two words become fixed to mean one thing or idea. As written, a space separates each word in a set phrase (e.g., the white house, a moving van). Such a space usually signals the boundary between words. When found in a set phrase, however, the space introduces ambiguity; for instance, it is unclear whether the white house refers to "a white house" or "the White House". When the set phrase is uttered aloud, it is articulated more like a compound noun, not two distinct words: the white house, a moving van. This pattern follows the normal rule for stressing English nouns and English compounds. In addition, the shift in stress mandates a change in the spelling of "white house" to "White House." Orthography is dictated by stress.
Set phrases often have minimal pair counterparts composed of an unstressed adjective + STRESSED NOUN. This pattern is the default. Using the adj+NOUN stress pattern makes the meaning more general (e.g., a white house or a moving van), or changes it entirely (e.g., a computer screen [the monitor] vs. a computer screen [a data screen performed by computer]).
The observation that stress alone can turn adj+NOUN combinations into full-fledged nouns suggests that compounding is first notated in English through prosody. After achieving widespread usage and acceptance, the two-word combination, spoken as a set phrase, becomes fixed as a compound word and spelled as such.
Set phrases whose meaning cannot be deduced from the literal definitions and the arrangement of their parts are known as idioms.
Examples of set phrases
- -ceiling fan
- com-puter screen
- -dinner table
- -style manual
- -book review
Spaces and containers
Base words that have spatial or container semantic content frequently combine as set phrases: room, office, box, bag.
- -plant room
- -conference room
- -news room
- -sewing room
- -tax office
- -lunch box
- -sports bag
- re-tirement package ("package" here is a metaphorical container)
-ing action spaces
Action-based "ing" words when combined with nouns representing spaces and/or containers frequently trigger set phrase stress.
- running shoe
- moving van
- starting place
- eating place
- sewing machine
Phrases receiving descriptive stress (Adj./Noun)
Certain commonly combined words appear to be fixed as set phrases. Yet spoken stress follows the Adjective/Noun pattern.
- only -child - He is an only -child. (vs. He is the only -child I know)
- set -phrase - The linguist identified the newest set -phrase in the language.
- front -page - The photo was on the front -page.
- human -being - She's a nice human -being.
- lost oppor-tunity - That may be a lost oppor-tunity.
See also
References
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