Formation of nouns (nominalisation)
175
Nouns can be formed from other parts of speech, most commonly verbs. For example, the
verb fly can be converted into the nouns flying and flight. The adjectives bright and long form
the nouns brightness and length. The process is called nominalisation. The nominalised
form is used more in written and formal contexts:
We
fly at seven o’clock this evening.
Our
flight is at seven o’clock this evening.
Mr Hamson
donated £2000.
Mr Hamson made a
donation of £2000.
I was dazzled by the extremely
bright lights.
I was dazzled by the extreme
brightness of the lights.
They
partied all night and we decided to complain to the hotel.
We decided to make a
complaint to the hotel about their all-night parties.
In each example here, the second sentence contains one or more nominalised forms. This
results in a more formal expression of the equivalent meaning in a different word class.
Sometimes the noun is derived from another part of speech to which it is related. Sometimes
the noun is formed metaphorically rather than derived (morphologically) from another part
of speech:
They were able to
get to the computer once a week.
Access to the computer was once a week.
Mobile phones are
getting much better technically.
There have been many technical
advances with mobile phones.
Nominalised forms can sometimes be used without reference to an agent and in certain
contexts this can mean the cause or agent can be concealed or made less important:
The
closure of the factory caused 200 workers to lose their jobs.
(compare: Meteorcorp closed the factory and 200 workers lost their jobs.)
The
dismissal of the union leaders was immediate.
(compare: The director of the company dismissed the union leaders immediately.)
Another type of nominalised structure, common in everyday usage, is the delexical verb
phrase + noun phrase structure. Delexical verbs include go, get, make, do, take (
Û
475a
).
Delexical structures often offer an informal equivalent to a full lexical verb phrase:
They
got a divorce in 1998.
(compare the more formal: They divorced in 1998.)
He hasn’t
done any painting since he retired.
(compare: He has not painted since he retired.)
Û
142 Nominalisation in Grammar and academic English
Û
539 Glossary for any unfamiliar terms
The noun phrase | 333
Nouns and determiners
Introduction
176
Count nouns
177
Count nouns and determiners 177a
Count nouns: same singular and
plural forms 177b
Sort of, type of, kind of, class of +
count noun 177c
Non-count nouns
178
General 178a
Singular non-count nouns 178b
Non-count nouns ending in -s 178c
Plural non-count nouns 178d
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