Verb: Difference between revisions

19 bytes added ,  20 April 2022
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A doing word. For example, in the phrase “''the [[mediocre lawyer|solicitor]] butchered the English language'',” “butchered” is the {{tag|verb}}.
{{a|plainenglish|}}A doing word. For example, in the phrase “''the [[mediocre lawyer|solicitor]] butchered the English language'',” “butchered” is the {{tag|verb}}.


A good way to butcher the language is to convert your {{tag|verb}}s to {{tag|noun}}s. You can do this easily: take an interesting {{tag|verb}} (like ''butcher''), castrate it by adding a duller verb in front of it (like “to ''subject'' to”<ref>Pendants will delight that the verb “to subject” itself started out life as a noun</ref>.) and then humiliate it by saddling it with an ugly {{tag|suffix}}. For example a ''y'', or an ''ification'' - upon which act of desecration it will be a [[noun]]. This is called [[nominalisation]], and lawyers do it all the time.
A good way to butcher the language is to convert your {{tag|verb}}s to {{tag|noun}}s. You can do this easily: take an interesting {{tag|verb}} (like ''butcher''), castrate it by adding a duller verb in front of it (like “to ''subject'' to”<ref>Pendants will delight that the verb “to subject” itself started out life as a noun</ref>.) and then humiliate it by saddling it with an ugly {{tag|suffix}}. For example a ''y'', or an ''ification'' - upon which act of desecration it will be a [[noun]]. This is called [[nominalisation]], and lawyers do it all the time.