The suffix -ee: history, productivity, frequency and violation of stress rules

According to Bauer (1983), Barker (1998), Plag (2003) and Mühleisen (2010), -ee has become a very productive suffix, not confined any more to its original role in legal language as a patient suffix contrasted with the agent suffix -or (e.g. bailor / bailee). Many new coinages are supposed to have ap...

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Main Author: Ives Trevian
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Presses Universitaires du Midi 2020-12-01
Series:Anglophonia
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Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/anglophonia/3504
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author Ives Trevian
author_facet Ives Trevian
author_sort Ives Trevian
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description According to Bauer (1983), Barker (1998), Plag (2003) and Mühleisen (2010), -ee has become a very productive suffix, not confined any more to its original role in legal language as a patient suffix contrasted with the agent suffix -or (e.g. bailor / bailee). Many new coinages are supposed to have appeared in the 20th century, so that 163 words in -ee are now recorded in the online dictionaries of the OneLook search engine (e.g. American Heritage Dictionary, Cambridge Advanced Learner’s Dictionary, Collins English Dictionary, Merriam Webster’s Dictionary, Oxford Dictionaries, etc.). Some of the words formed with this suffix are now agent instead of patient nouns (e.g. escapee, returnee), occasionally rivalling with other agent suffixes (e.g. signee = signer). Moreover, besides the traditional deverbal formations (e.g. abductee), denominal and even deadjectival coinages are now sanctioned (e.g. asylee, presentee). The purpose of this paper is (1) to show how this historical process came into being, namely when the change occurred from usage in legal language to other uses; (2) to examine this suffix in terms of its morphological productivity, notably to distinguish well-established nouns from mere nonce words, chiefly used as strictly contrastive (e.g. cutter / cuttee, jester / jestee); (3) to ascertain the frequency of -ee suffixed nouns; to do so we have confronted our corpus of -ee nouns with the word frequency search engine Google Books Ngram Viewer and the Collins Dictionary’s Recorded Usage Charts, the former noting the frequency of words since the 16th century and the latter containing dated sentence examples; (4) to determine how many words in -ee violate the rule proscribing two consecutive stresses (e.g. aˌsyˈlee, aˌwarˈdee), this violation being, in principle, allowed only in compound words (e.g. ˈbootˌlegger, ˈteenˌager) or semantically transparent formations with a prefix (e.g. ˌreˈmake, ˌunˈthaw, verbs); an attempt to account for these violations is proposed in this paper, which has inevitably led us to ponder over the impact of this suffix on metrical rules.
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spelling doaj-art-42fe5ab772a641bc8582f5f2725c797d2025-01-30T12:32:41ZengPresses Universitaires du MidiAnglophonia1278-33312427-04662020-12-013010.4000/anglophonia.3504The suffix -ee: history, productivity, frequency and violation of stress rulesIves TrevianAccording to Bauer (1983), Barker (1998), Plag (2003) and Mühleisen (2010), -ee has become a very productive suffix, not confined any more to its original role in legal language as a patient suffix contrasted with the agent suffix -or (e.g. bailor / bailee). Many new coinages are supposed to have appeared in the 20th century, so that 163 words in -ee are now recorded in the online dictionaries of the OneLook search engine (e.g. American Heritage Dictionary, Cambridge Advanced Learner’s Dictionary, Collins English Dictionary, Merriam Webster’s Dictionary, Oxford Dictionaries, etc.). Some of the words formed with this suffix are now agent instead of patient nouns (e.g. escapee, returnee), occasionally rivalling with other agent suffixes (e.g. signee = signer). Moreover, besides the traditional deverbal formations (e.g. abductee), denominal and even deadjectival coinages are now sanctioned (e.g. asylee, presentee). The purpose of this paper is (1) to show how this historical process came into being, namely when the change occurred from usage in legal language to other uses; (2) to examine this suffix in terms of its morphological productivity, notably to distinguish well-established nouns from mere nonce words, chiefly used as strictly contrastive (e.g. cutter / cuttee, jester / jestee); (3) to ascertain the frequency of -ee suffixed nouns; to do so we have confronted our corpus of -ee nouns with the word frequency search engine Google Books Ngram Viewer and the Collins Dictionary’s Recorded Usage Charts, the former noting the frequency of words since the 16th century and the latter containing dated sentence examples; (4) to determine how many words in -ee violate the rule proscribing two consecutive stresses (e.g. aˌsyˈlee, aˌwarˈdee), this violation being, in principle, allowed only in compound words (e.g. ˈbootˌlegger, ˈteenˌager) or semantically transparent formations with a prefix (e.g. ˌreˈmake, ˌunˈthaw, verbs); an attempt to account for these violations is proposed in this paper, which has inevitably led us to ponder over the impact of this suffix on metrical rules.https://journals.openedition.org/anglophonia/3504productivityword-formation historymorphophonologystress assignmentstress clashes
spellingShingle Ives Trevian
The suffix -ee: history, productivity, frequency and violation of stress rules
Anglophonia
productivity
word-formation history
morphophonology
stress assignment
stress clashes
title The suffix -ee: history, productivity, frequency and violation of stress rules
title_full The suffix -ee: history, productivity, frequency and violation of stress rules
title_fullStr The suffix -ee: history, productivity, frequency and violation of stress rules
title_full_unstemmed The suffix -ee: history, productivity, frequency and violation of stress rules
title_short The suffix -ee: history, productivity, frequency and violation of stress rules
title_sort suffix ee history productivity frequency and violation of stress rules
topic productivity
word-formation history
morphophonology
stress assignment
stress clashes
url https://journals.openedition.org/anglophonia/3504
work_keys_str_mv AT ivestrevian thesuffixeehistoryproductivityfrequencyandviolationofstressrules
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