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verbbuilding

Verbbuilding is the process by which new verbs are formed from existing words, especially nouns or adjectives, through a variety of word-formation processes. It covers denominal verbs (verbs derived from nouns), verbal back-formation, conversion (zero-derivation), and affixation that yields new verbs from other parts of speech. The term is not uniformly used in all grammars, but it describes a productive area of lexical expansion in many languages.

Denominal verbs are a common focus of verbbuilding. Examples include verbs created from nouns such as bottle,

Affixation and compounding also contribute to verbbuilding. Suffixes like -ize, -en, -ify, and -ate regularly turn

Linguists study verbbuilding to understand productivity, semantic shifts, and the interaction of lexical borrowing, syntax, and

chair,
or
scarf
(to
bottle,
to
chair,
to
scarf),
where
a
noun
inherits
verbal
use
with
little
or
no
alteration
to
form.
Adjectival
sources
also
contribute,
with
verbs
formed
from
adjectives
via
suffixes
like
-en,
-ize,
or
-ify,
giving
examples
such
as
brighten
(from
bright),
modernize
(from
modern),
or
simplify
(from
simple).
Back-formation
can
produce
verbs
from
nouns
or
phrases,
as
in
babysit
(from
babysitter)
or
edit
from
editor
in
some
historical
spellings,
though
modern
use
often
fixes
the
more
familiar
noun-verb
forms.
adjectives
or
nouns
into
verbs
in
English
and
many
other
languages.
In
some
cases,
nouns
or
phrases
are
combined
to
form
verb-like
units,
such
as
web-related
or
brand-based
verbs
like
Google
(as
a
verb)
or
email
(as
a
verb).
Seepage
of
informal
or
brand-language
into
common
usage
further
expands
the
verbal
lexicon.
morphology
across
languages.