On Mock-scholarly, Faux-casual, and Cod Philosophy:
Patterns of Diachronic Change in a British NewspaperR.HaraldBaayenUniversity of Nijmegen, The Netherlands AntoinetteRenoufUniversity of Liverpool, UK 2000University of GlasgowGlasgowALLC/ACH 2000editorJeanAndersonAmalChatterjeeChristianJ.KayMargaretScottencoderSaraA.SchmidtStylisticsIntroductionIn British newspapers, various 'vogue' prefix-like forms regularly appear
(Renouf & Baayen, 1998; see also Baayen & Renouf, 1996, for standard
affixation). This study considers three such forms: MOCK, COD, and FAUX.
These forms are primarily used to modify nouns, as in (1) he explodes in mock-outrage chain belts, studded with faux gems
around the hips a quick snipe at the cod-mysticism and to modify adjectives, as in (2) a charmingly mock modest touch coming back on stage, faux sheepish a
Russian night club - cod-glamorous Occasionally, one finds instances of adverbial modification, (3) Rabelais at his most mock heroically cloacal ordered him out of the
house, faux-crossly and for MOCK, examples also exist of verbal modification:(4) he mock bows, gallantly he has to mock-apologise for his tedious
bleating This study addresses the productivity of MOCK, COD, and FAUX by investigating
their use in a British newspaper, The Independent, from a diachronic
perspective. To this end, we extracted all occurrences of these forms from a
corpus of this newspaper, compiled from 1988 onwards, and currently
containing some 360 million word forms. For each of the years 1989-1998, we
measured the type and token frequencies of these words in 4 successive
3-month chunks. For 1988, the last 3-month chunk was also taken into
account. The questions to be addressed are whether changes in the frequency
with which these vogue forms are used across time can be observed, and
whether the forms with a hyphen (as in FAUX-SHABBY) reveal different
patterns from the forms without a hyphen (as in FAUX SHEEPISH), which would
suggest that syntactic context would co-determine the productivity of these
combining forms.ResultsFigure 1 will summarize the results obtained. The solid lines and the dots
represent the numbers of tokens counted for the successive chunks. The
dashed lines represent the numbers of new types observed across sampling
time. Both line types were obtained using a non-parametric regression
smoother (Cleveland, 1979). For reasons of space, we defer discussion of the
type counts to the presentation at the conference. The left panels represent
the forms without a hyphen, the right panels the forms with the hyphen.The top panels of Figure 1 show the results obtained for MOCK and MOCK-. The
left panel reveals a slow but steady increase for the token counts (r =
0.388, t(39) = 2.6294, p = .0122). The right panel suggests that the use of
MOCK- did not change in the last 10 years (r = 0.194, t(39) = 1.237, p =
.2234). A closer investigation of the MOCK data revealed that the increase
in the number of tokens is primarily carried by the lowest-frequency types -
the highest-frequency types have a relatively stable use across the years. The central panels of Figure 1 concern COD (left) and COD- (right). For both
forms, we observe a reliable increase over time, which appears to be more
linear for COD- (r = 0.656, t(39) = 5.437, p = .0000) than for COD (r =
0.473, t(39) = 3.357, p = .0018). For both COD and COD-, an autocorrelation
analysis suggests a reliable correlation at short lags, suggesting that the
extent to which a form is used in a given month is co-determined by the
extent to which it was popular or unpopular in the preceding months.The bottom panels of Figure 1 suggest that FAUX and FAUX- were hardly used
initially, but that in the second half of the sampling period they enjoyed
greater productivity. Both non-parametric regression lines and parametric
change point analysis suggest a breakpoint around the end of 1992, after
which FAUX and FAUX- began to become more and more productive. What we
probably are witnessing here is the birth of what may eventually become a
fully-fledged new prefix of English.Intriguingly, all three left panels show a (local) minimum at this point in
time (marked in the plots by a vertical dotted line). Possibly, the general
fashion for vogue modification with any of the near synonyms MOCK, COD, and
FAUX reached an all-time low around the end of 1992, from which both MOCK
and COD recovered. Note that Figure 1 shows that both forms show an increase
in use during the immediately following chunks. This general fashion for
vogue modification may have led in its wake to the upsurge in productivity
of FAUX and FAUX-.ConclusionsWe have observed different patterns of diachronic change through an
investigation of vogue modification in The Independent: a steady state
(MOCK-), a linear increase over time (MOCK, COD-), a slightly oscillating
pattern (COD), and a birth pattern (FAUX). The forms of MOCK- (with hyphen)
show a clearly different pattern than the forms with MOCK (without hyphen),
which shows that forms with and without hyphen should not be lumped together
a priori. The syntactic contexts that favor hyphenation (e.g., modification
of a prenominal noun or adjective) lead to slightly different diachronic
patterns. Thanks to the accumulation of large diachronic computerized
corpora, it is, at the end of the second millennium, finally becoming
possible to directly monitor ongoing language change.ReferencesR.HaraldBaayenAntoinetteRenoufChronicling The Times: Productive Lexical Innovations
in an English NewspaperLanguage7269-961996W.S.ClevelandRobust locally weighted regression and smooting
scatterplotsJASA74829-8361979AntoinetteRenoufR.HaraldBaayenAviating among the hapax legomena: Morphological
grammaticalisation in current British newspaper EnglishA.RenoufExplorations in Corpus LinguisticsAmsterdamRodopi1998181-189