In:Figurativity and Human Ecology
Edited by Alexandra Bagasheva, Bozhil Hristov and Nelly Tincheva
[Figurative Thought and Language 17] 2022
► pp. 275–304
Lexical blending in terms of cognitive modeling
Published online: 10 November 2022
https://doi.org/10.1075/ftl.17.11pen
https://doi.org/10.1075/ftl.17.11pen
Abstract
This corpus-based proposal provides a
fine-grained study of lexical blending in the English language in
terms of cognitive modeling. Blending as a word-formation process
has gained growing popularity in recent years either to fill certain
lexical/conceptual gaps or simply to endow language with creativity.
Blended words are defined as combinations of two or more lexemes,
one of which at least has been clipped (Bauer, 2003; Plag, 2003). Researchers of different
persuasions have addressed topics like the definition of blends,
their status as part of prosodic morphology, their scaffolding, the
recognizability of the source words making them up, their degree of
entrenchment, their lack of morphological analyzability, their
classification, and the meaning each of the source words contributes
to the resulting blend (Adams,
1973; Algeo,
1977; Bauer,
2003; Kemmer,
2003; Plag,
2003). Our corpus of analysis has been retrieved from the
online Cambridge Dictionary, consists of 715
lexical items, and covers a five-year time span, from 2016 to 2020.
The analysis of our data reveals that the most productive
word-formation process is compounding, followed by blending, which
accounts for 27.83% of our data (199 coinages). We provide evidence
of the regularity of blended words and of their principled nature by
drawing on the latest developments in cognitive modeling (Peña & Ruiz de Mendoza,
2017; Ruiz de
Mendoza, 2020; Ruiz
de Mendoza & Galera, 2014). In this connection, we
offer an in-depth study of parameterization (both metonymic and
non-metonymic), generalization, contrast, resemblance,
strengthening, expansion, and reduction as cognitive operations that
play a fundamental role in the creation and construal of blended
words.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Methodology and data collection
- 3.Word-formation processes in the creation of recent English coinages
- 4.Making sense of blends: The semantic links between the source words of blended words
- 5.A thumbnail sketch of the notion of cognitive operation
- 6.Shedding light on blending in terms of cognitive modeling
- 6.1Morphosyntactic patterns of blends
- 6.2Parameterization and the creation of new members within existing categories
- 6.3Drawing the speakers’ attention by means of contrast
- 6.4Expansion and reduction, conceptual complexity, and the thought-provoking nature of blends
- 7.Conclusion
Acknowledgements Notes References
References (47)
(1991). Fifty
years among the new words: A dictionary of neologisms,
1941 –
1991. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Arcodia, G. F., & Montermini, F. (2012). Are
reduced compounds compounds? Morphological and prosodic
properties of reduced compounds in Russian and Mandarin
Chinese. In V. Renner, F. Maniez, & P. J. R. Arnaud (Eds.), Cross-Disciplinary
perspectives on lexical
blending (pp. 93–113). Berlin/Boston: Walter de Gruyter.
Arndt-Lappe, S., & Plag, I. (2013). The
role of prosodic structure in the formation of English
blends. English Language and
Linguistics, 17(3), 357–563.
Balteiro, I., & Bauer, L. (Eds.). (2019a). Blending
in English. Lexis. Journal in
English
Lexicology, 14.
(2019b). Introduction. Lexis.
Journal in English
Lexicology, 14. [URL].
Barrena Jurado, A. (2019). A
study on the ‘wordgasm’: The nature of blends’
splinters. Lexis. Journal in
English
Lexicology, 14.
Bat-El, O. (2006). Blend. In K. Brown (Ed.), Encyclopedia
of Language & Linguistics vol.
2 (pp. 66–70, 2nd
ed). Oxford: Elsevier.
(2012). Blends:
Core and
periphery. In V. Renner, F. Maniez, & P. J. R. Arnaud (Eds.), Cross-disciplinary
perspectives on lexical
blending (pp. 11–22). Berlin/Boston: Walter de Gruyter.
Bauer, L., Beliaeva, N., & Tarasova, E. (2019). Recalibrating
productivity: Factors
involved. Zeitschrift für
Wortbildung/Journal of Word
Formation, 3(1), 44–80(37).
Bauer, L., Lieber, R., & Plag, I. (2013). The
Oxford reference guide to English
morphology. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Beliaeva, N. (2014). A
study of English blends: From structure to meaning and back
again. Word
Structure, 7(1), 29–54.
(2016). Blends
at the intersection of addition and subtraction: Evidence
from processing. SKASE
Journal of Theoretical
Linguistics, 13(2), 23–45.
(2019). Blending
creativity and productivity: On the issue of delimiting the
boundaries of blends as a type of word
formation. Lexis. Journal in
English
Lexicology, 14.
(2021). Blending
in
morphology. In R. Lieber (Ed.), The
Oxford encyclopedia of
morphology. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Brdar-Szabó, R., & Brdar, M. (2008). On
the marginality of lexical
blending. Jezikoslovlje, 9(1/2), 171–194.
Chung, K. S. (2009). Putting
blends in their
place. Presentation at
the Universals and
Typology in Word-formation Conference. P. J.
Šafáric University in Košice and the Slovak Association for
the Study of English. Košice,
Slovakia, 16–18 August
2009. [URL]
Correia Saavedra, D. (2014). Automatically
identifying blend splinters that are morpheme
candidates. Digital
Scholarship in the
Humanities, 31(1), 55–71.
Cruse, A. (2010). Meaning
in language. An introduction to semantics and
pragmatics (2nd
ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Dressler, W. U. (2000). Extragrammatical
vs. marginal
morphology. In U. Doleschal, & A. M. Thornton (Eds.), Extragrammatical
and marginal
morphology (pp. 1–10). Munich: Lincom Europa.
Fauconnier, G., & Turner, M. (2002). The
way we think: Conceptual blending and the mind’s hidden
complexities. New York: Basic Books.
Gries, S. T. (2006). Cognitive
determinants of subtractive word-formation processes: A
corpus-based
perspective. Linguistics, 17(4), 535–558.
(2012). Quantitative
corpus data on blend formation: Psycho- and
cognitive-linguistic
perspectives. In V. Renner, F. Maniez, & P. J. R. Arnaud (Eds.), Cross-disciplinary
perspectives on lexical
blending (pp. 145–167). Berlin/Boston: Walter de Gruyter.
Kemmer, S. (2003). Schemas
and lexical
blends. In H. C. Cuyckens, T. Berg, R. Dirven, & K-U. Panther (Eds.), Motivation
in language: From Case Grammar to Cognitive Linguistics.
Studies in Honour of Günter
Radden (pp. 69–97). Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins.
(1999). Philosophy
in the flesh. The embodied mind and its challenge to Western
thought. New York: Basic Books.
Lehrer, A. (1998). Shapes,
holics and thons: The semantics of English combining
forms. American
Speech, 73(1), 3–28.
(2007). Blendalicious. In J. Munat (Ed.), Lexical
creativity, texts, and
contexts (pp. 115–133). Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins.
López Rúa, P. (2012). Beyond
all reasonable transgression: Lexical blending in
alternative
music. In V. Renner, F. Maniez, & P. J. R. Arnaud (Eds.), Cross-disciplinary
perspectives on lexical
blending (pp. 23–34). Berlin/Boston: Walter de Gruyter.
Marchand, H. (1969). The
categories and types of present-day English word-formation:
A synchronic-diachronic
approach. München: C.H. Becksche Verlagsbuchhandlung.
Mattiello, E. (2019). A
corpus-based study of new English
blends. Lexis. Journal in
English
Lexicology, 14. 2020.
Panther, K. U., & Thornburg, L. (2012). Antonymy
in language structure and
use. In M. Brdar, I. Raffaelli, & M. Ž. Fuchs (Eds.), Cognitive
Linguistics between universality and
variation (pp. 161–188). Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars.
Peña, M. S. (2022). El papel de las operaciones cognitivas metonímicas en la interpretación de las formas truncadas en lengua inglesa. Cultura, Lenguaje y Representación, XXVII, 117–135.
Peña, M. S., & Ruiz de Mendoza, F. J. (2017). Construing
and constructing
hyperbole. In A. Athanasiadou (Ed.), Studies
in figurative thought and
language (pp. 41–73). Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins.
Ralli, A., & Xydopoulos, G. J. (2012). Blend
formation in modern
Greek. In V. Renner, F. Maniez, & P. J. R. Arnaud (Eds.), Cross-disciplinary
perspectives on lexical
blending (pp. 35–50). Berlin/Boston: Walter de Gruyter.
Renner, V. (2015). Lexical
blending as
wordplay. In A. Zirker, & E. Winter-Froemel (Eds.), Wordplay
and metalinguistic/metadiscursive reflection: Authors,
contexts, techniques, and
meta-reflection (pp. 119–133). Berlin/Boston: Mouton de Gruyter.
Renner, V., Maniez, F., & Arnaud, P. J. R. (Eds.). (2012). Cross-disciplinary
perspectives on lexical
blending. Berlin/Boston: Walter de Gruyter.
Ruiz de Mendoza, F. J. (2020). Understanding
figures of speech: Dependency relations and organizational
patterns. Language &
Communication, 71, 16–38.
Ruiz de Mendoza, F. J., & Galera, A. (2014). Cognitive
modeling. A linguistic
perspective. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins.
Cited by (3)
Cited by three other publications
Bagasheva, Alexandra
Peña-Cervel, Mª Sandra
2025. Sources of incongruity in advertising. In What makes a Figure [Figurative Thought and Language, 19], ► pp. 66 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 9 december 2025. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.
