quinterbeck wrote: ↑Sat Oct 13, 2018 2:55 pm Is there a term for this occurrence, where two words of similar meaning form a phrase with no or very little added meaning. For example, bunny rabbit, which came up in this thread: viewtopic.php?f=3&t=137
Failing a term, can anyone cite any other examples? (Also of interest is the case where one word in a two-word phrase carries all the meaning, and the other adds none or very little.)
JT the Ninja wrote: ↑Sat Oct 13, 2018 1:22 pmI was actually thinking of something similar to that earlier today, only more due to common stock phrasings than homophone distinction. Like if the word became bunnyrabbit instead of "bunny rabbit."quinterbeck wrote: ↑Sat Oct 13, 2018 8:25 am Morphological rather than phonological: Chinese added clarifying morphemes to words which became homophones with each other as a disambiguation strategy
http://www.lilec.it/mmm/wp/wp-content/u ... pounds.pdf says "(endocentric) coordinate compound" .... though not quite as specific, it definitely includes the type where the 2 elements are synonyms. Japanese has a lot of this too.
re-quoting because i bumped..