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nominalizat

Nominalizat, or nominalization in English, is the linguistic process by which a word or clause is turned into a noun or noun phrase. This allows actions, events, or propositions to function as grammatical subjects, objects, or modifiers within a sentence. The resulting nominal often encodes abstract or generalized meaning and can be the head of a noun phrase.

Nominalization occurs through several mechanisms. Derivational nominalization adds affixes to form nouns from verbs or adjectives

Nominalization is common in many languages and serves to focus discourse on outcomes, processes, or generalizations

(for
example,
decide
→
decision;
run
→
a
run;
happy
→
happiness).
Zero-derivation,
or
conversion,
uses
the
same
form
for
noun
and
verb:
as
in
“the
run
took
two
hours”
or
“the
meeting
was
scheduled,”
where
the
noun
is
formed
from
the
verb
without
an
explicit
suffix.
Clausal
nominalization
turns
an
entire
clause
into
a
noun
phrase,
often
with
a
determiner,
as
in
“the
fact
that
she
arrived
late”
or
“her
arrival
surprised
us.”
rather
than
on
specific
actions.
It
can
influence
syntax
and
information
structure,
allowing
longer
or
more
abstract
noun
phrases,
but
may
reduce
immediacy
and
readability
if
overused.
In
linguistic
analysis,
nominalized
forms
are
central
to
discussions
of
argument
structure,
voice,
and
the
density
of
information,
making
them
a
key
tool
for
modeling
how
language
encodes
actions
and
propositions
as
concrete
entities.