Language isn’t static. Meanings and usage change over time. I have to admit that the yearly updates to Websters, OED, etc make me shake my head but there ya go. (and yeah. Weather people are the worst. LOL)
English uses denominative verbs all the time, indeed by the thousands, largely without morphological markers. There are such, as -ize, but they have more or less specific meanings. In some cases there used to be a specific verb form, like to nist “to make a nest”, or to milch “to get milk from a cow”, which has been lost.
An interesting feature of denominative verbs built to nouns is that the actual meaning is unpredictable—you just have to know that to skirt means “to go around or past the edge of”. On the other hand, denominatives built to adjectives are quite predictable: to yellow, to brighten, to soften, to coarsen, and so on.
Concretionist almost 3 years ago
Verbing weirds language.
Wilde Bill almost 3 years ago
Just wait until he hears about “Illegals”.
Brass Orchid Premium Member almost 3 years ago
For all things drift into the darkness and are gone forever from the world, in the fullness of time.
A# 466 almost 3 years ago
There is no noun that can’t be verbed.
dflak almost 3 years ago
I don’t like it when people noun verbs.
Zebrastripes almost 3 years ago
If it isn’t sensationalized, no one watches…
MS72 almost 3 years ago
My fave is “tornadic”.
Lee26 Premium Member almost 3 years ago
He’ll be heading back to 1895 rather quickly and be scarred for life. Some things just should not be seen.
joegee almost 3 years ago
Language isn’t static. Meanings and usage change over time. I have to admit that the yearly updates to Websters, OED, etc make me shake my head but there ya go. (and yeah. Weather people are the worst. LOL)
Ed The Red Premium Member almost 3 years ago
For everyone who objects to turning nouns into verbs, I’m assuming you’ve never:
drank a drink,
hammered with a hammer,
screwed in a screw,
fished for fish,
or shouted a shout.
There are many, many more. It’s hardly some new phenomena. All that you can do is object to new ones while you’re still using the old ones.
mistercatworks almost 3 years ago
I couldn’t believe it when I moved to California and heard rainfall predicted in one-hundredths of an inch.
HappyDog/ᵀʳʸ ᴮᵒᶻᵒ ⁴ ᵗʰᵉ ᶠᵘⁿ ᵒᶠ ᶦᵗ Premium Member almost 3 years ago
Wait until the news guy “times it out” for us. That drives me batty.
schaefer jim almost 3 years ago
Or breezy for windy!
PoodleGroomer almost 3 years ago
Sometimes it is rain with wind. Sometimes it is an event. Events require rescue teams, chainsaws, and shovels.
buckman-j almost 3 years ago
How about…Data, Media and criteria is? Last year I couldn’t spell journalist, and now I is one.
AndrewSihler almost 3 years ago
English uses denominative verbs all the time, indeed by the thousands, largely without morphological markers. There are such, as -ize, but they have more or less specific meanings. In some cases there used to be a specific verb form, like to nist “to make a nest”, or to milch “to get milk from a cow”, which has been lost.
An interesting feature of denominative verbs built to nouns is that the actual meaning is unpredictable—you just have to know that to skirt means “to go around or past the edge of”. On the other hand, denominatives built to adjectives are quite predictable: to yellow, to brighten, to soften, to coarsen, and so on.
wi3leong Premium Member almost 3 years ago
The name of the protagonist of the The Time Machine was never mentioned in the book but was clearly not Wells himself.
spaced man spliff almost 3 years ago
802,701 CE. I’l go for More Lox.
knowledge.seeker.62 almost 3 years ago
why is this funny? i genuinely don’t get the humor. i understand the words, but i don’t see the joke