Nominalisation: Difference between revisions
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{{tag|Nominalisation}} | {{tag|Nominalisation}} — itself, a nominalisation of the verb to "nominalise"<ref>[[Goedel]] would be pleased.</ref> — is the act, as adored by [[mediocre lawyer|solicitors]] as it is loathed by anyone who cares for the English language, of gutting a precise {{tag|verb}}, by converting it into a {{tag|noun}} and jamming a general {{tag|verb}} in front of it. | ||
Or should I say: | Or should I say: | ||
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Not that there’s anything wrong with cross-dressing, mind. | Not that there’s anything wrong with cross-dressing, mind. | ||
===Examples=== | |||
{{plain|[[have visibility of]]|see}} | |||
{{plain|issue a notification to|tell}} | |||
{{plain|have a discussion about|discuss}} | |||
{{plain|we are supportive of|we support}} | |||
{{plain|have the appearance of being|seem}}<br /> | |||
{{seealso}} | {{seealso}} | ||
*[[Adjectivisation]] | *[[Adjectivisation]] |
Revision as of 09:47, 14 December 2018
Nominalisation — itself, a nominalisation of the verb to "nominalise"[1] — is the act, as adored by solicitors as it is loathed by anyone who cares for the English language, of gutting a precise verb, by converting it into a noun and jamming a general verb in front of it.
Or should I say:
- Nominalisation is the act, which induces adoration in solicitors as much as it effects a sensation of loathing in anyone having a fondness for the English language, of ensuring the evisceration of a precise verb by effecting its conversion into a noun (or adjective) and ensuring the jammery of a general verb in front of it.
Dead give aways:
- the string “ion of”
- gerunds
- infinitives
Effecting a nominalisation: grammatical cross-dressing
The worst kind of nominalisation goes a step further: not only must the poor verb dress up as a noun; an equally unsuspecting noun must behave like a verb. “Effect” is this kind of nominalisation.
Not that there’s anything wrong with cross-dressing, mind.
Examples
Why say “have visibility of” when you mean “see”?
Why say “issue a notification to” when you mean “tell”?
Why say “have a discussion about” when you mean “discuss”?
Why say “we are supportive of” when you mean “we support”?
Why say “have the appearance of being” when you mean “seem”?
See also
- Adjectivisation
- Of - a dead giveaway.
- To be - the feeblest of all verbs.
- Obligated