In this paper, we provide an analysis of the present-day distribution of the -ster suffix in English and account for that distribution through the diachronic forces that shaped it. Taking a constructional approach (Bybee 2010), we show that words with the -ster suffix in Middle English constituted a semantically coherent set in so far as the items in that set mostly referred to professions. In the latter part of the first half of the Modern English period, we find a renaissance of -ster usage, albeit with a semantic shift toward the identification of a human agent (usually male) involved in activities that were subversive, illicit or even criminal, e.g. gangster. We sketch out a model in which certain of the constructions stand as central members, or exemplars, which then serve as analogical bases to which other constructions with -ster are extended. We argue that the cumulative effect of the central exemplars of this set strengthens the representation of -ster as formally independent and imbues it with the emergent meaning of subversion, illicitness, or criminality. The result of these diachronic process is a very healthy productivity of -ster in later modern English and a distribution across several domains.
The Suffix -ster in Present-day English: A Usage-based and Network Model Account
K. Aaron Smith is a professor of linguistics at Illinois State University. He is the author of several articles and chapters on language change within functionalist/usage-based theory. He is the co-author (along with Susan M. Kim) of “This Language, A River: A History of English” and author of “A New Form-Function Grammar of English.”
Zachary Dukic is a PhD candidate and graduate teaching assistant at Illinois State University. His research focuses on derivational morphology, corpus linguistics and history of the English language. He received his MA in English linguistics from North Carolina State University in 2019 and BA in interdisciplinary studies from the University of Tennessee in 2016.
K. Aaron Smith, Zachary Dukic; The Suffix -ster in Present-day English: A Usage-based and Network Model Account. American Speech 2024; doi: https://doi.org/10.1215/00031283-11466482
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