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Lexpansion

Lexpansion is a term sometimes used in linguistic literature to describe the growth of a language’s lexicon over time. It refers to the expansion of lexical items—words, phrases, and meaningful units—through neologisms, borrowings, semantic broadening, derivation, and compounding. While not universally standardized, lexpansion captures the idea of word-formation activity contributing to the size and diversity of the lexicon.

Mechanisms of lexpansion include borrowing from other languages, especially for technological, cultural, or specialized terms; productive

Examples commonly cited in discussions of lexpansion involve terms adopted from other languages (for instance, technical

Scholarly usage varies: some linguists prefer terms such as lexical growth, lexicalization, or vocabulary expansion. Lexpansion

derivation
and
affixation
that
create
new
words
from
existing
roots;
semantic
shift
and
broadening
that
extend
a
word’s
range
of
meanings;
and
the
formation
of
compounds
and
blended
forms.
Social
factors
such
as
technology,
media,
globalization,
and
language
contact
often
accelerate
lexpansion,
while
orthographic
and
typographic
conventions
influence
how
newly
coined
items
are
borrowed
or
adapted.
vocabulary
entering
a
language),
as
well
as
semantic
changes
like
the
word
cloud
acquiring
the
sense
related
to
cloud
computing,
or
the
animal
word
mouse
becoming
a
generic
label
for
a
computer
pointing
device.
Neologisms
created
in
online
communities
or
professional
domains
are
also
part
of
lexpansion.
is
typically
treated
as
a
diachronic
phenomenon
in
historical
and
sociolinguistic
contexts,
reflecting
how
languages
continually
extend
their
expressive
resources.
See
also
lexicon,
lexicalization,
semantic
change,
borrowing,
and
neologism.