CONVERSION FROM ADJECTIVE TO NOUN IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE

Authors

  • Saytova Sarbinaz Umbetbaevna,Badirova Dilfuza Asamatdinovna KSU The Faculty of Foreign Languages Specialty of Philology and Teaching Languages Author

Keywords:

adjective, noun, nominalization, changes, word class, process

Abstract

This work is a comprehensive and detailed analysis of the process of conversion from adjective to noun in English language, which is one of the ways of nominalization. The author explores the various aspects of this phenomenon, such as the morphological changes that occur when an adjective becomes a noun, the syntactic structures that allow or constrain this conversion, and the semantic implications that arise from the shift in word class. The work also provides a clear and systematic typology of the different types of nominalizations that can be formed from adjectives, such as zero-derivation, suffixation and compounding. The author supports his arguments with examples from different genres and registers of English, and discusses the historical and sociolinguistic factors that have influenced the development and usage of nominalization. The author claims that nominalization is a productive and creative process that enriches the vocabulary and expresses various meanings and functions in different contexts.

References

The Book Thief by Markus Zusak, page 341

The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern, page 772

Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier, page 24

The Secret of the Nagas by Amish Tripathi, page 87

The Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafón, page 14

The Wretched of the Earth by Frantz Fanon, page 33

Published

2024-04-21