What is the exact technical word to describe the relationship between a verb and noun with the same root?





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I'm editing a paper and the sentence I need to fix is, "Thus, the word and its_________ appear seven times in the chapter."



The word in question is a Hebrew word meaning to "rejoice" but the noun form, with an almost identical root meaning "gladness," is part of the seven occurrences. I thought of using "cognate" but that seems to be emphasizing a word "descended from the same language" which is not the emphasis here. I need a word that describes the relationship between a verb and its noun form, e.g., "to fly" and "flight."










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    I'm editing a paper and the sentence I need to fix is, "Thus, the word and its_________ appear seven times in the chapter."



    The word in question is a Hebrew word meaning to "rejoice" but the noun form, with an almost identical root meaning "gladness," is part of the seven occurrences. I thought of using "cognate" but that seems to be emphasizing a word "descended from the same language" which is not the emphasis here. I need a word that describes the relationship between a verb and its noun form, e.g., "to fly" and "flight."










    share|improve this question







    New contributor




    Joseph O. is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.






















      up vote
      1
      down vote

      favorite









      up vote
      1
      down vote

      favorite











      I'm editing a paper and the sentence I need to fix is, "Thus, the word and its_________ appear seven times in the chapter."



      The word in question is a Hebrew word meaning to "rejoice" but the noun form, with an almost identical root meaning "gladness," is part of the seven occurrences. I thought of using "cognate" but that seems to be emphasizing a word "descended from the same language" which is not the emphasis here. I need a word that describes the relationship between a verb and its noun form, e.g., "to fly" and "flight."










      share|improve this question







      New contributor




      Joseph O. is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.











      I'm editing a paper and the sentence I need to fix is, "Thus, the word and its_________ appear seven times in the chapter."



      The word in question is a Hebrew word meaning to "rejoice" but the noun form, with an almost identical root meaning "gladness," is part of the seven occurrences. I thought of using "cognate" but that seems to be emphasizing a word "descended from the same language" which is not the emphasis here. I need a word that describes the relationship between a verb and its noun form, e.g., "to fly" and "flight."







      terminology






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      Joseph O. is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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          2 Answers
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          Derivative:




          (specialized language) a form of something, such as a word, made or developed from another form:




          • "Detestable" is a derivative of "detest”.




          (Cambridge Dictionary)






          share|improve this answer





















          • +1 This. Here's a reasonably authoritative linguistics site.
            – StoneyB
            36 mins ago


















          up vote
          0
          down vote













          You could use: nominal form, nounal form or, as you yourself suggest, noun form.



          Merriam-Webster give the following definitions:




          nominal adjective ...



          of, relating to, or being a noun or a word or expression taking a noun construction





          nounal adjective ...



          of, relating to, or of the
          nature, function, or quality of a noun




          And noun can itself be used adjectivally, as it is in the terms noun phrase or noun class.





          A cursory glace through Google Books search results suggests nominal form gets extensive use in linguistics texts:




          Early Indo-European languages present a wide range of nominal constructions that convey verbal action and combine a noun and a nominal form of the verb...



          Archaic Syntax in Indo-European: The Spread of Transitivity in Latin, Brigitte Bauer (2011)




          Nounal form seems to be seen more in non-linguistics texts, though it is also used in linguistics too.



          Noun form seems to get the most general use, and is also used in linguistics as well.



          According to Google Ngram viewer, noun form also seems to be the most common of the three:
          Ngrams comparing "noun form", "nominal form", "nounal form"



          For what it's worth, to my mind, noun form is also the nicest - it's simple and straightforward. It's also exactly the words that came to your own mind when trying to find a term!



          Absent a more specific term for Semitic languages in general or Hebrew in particular (ask on Linguistics, perhaps, if that's what you want), I'd go for noun form.



          I'd also use verb rather than word, so your sentence would read:




          Thus, the verb and its noun form appear seven times in the chapter.







          share|improve this answer























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            2 Answers
            2






            active

            oldest

            votes








            2 Answers
            2






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes








            up vote
            1
            down vote













            Derivative:




            (specialized language) a form of something, such as a word, made or developed from another form:




            • "Detestable" is a derivative of "detest”.




            (Cambridge Dictionary)






            share|improve this answer





















            • +1 This. Here's a reasonably authoritative linguistics site.
              – StoneyB
              36 mins ago















            up vote
            1
            down vote













            Derivative:




            (specialized language) a form of something, such as a word, made or developed from another form:




            • "Detestable" is a derivative of "detest”.




            (Cambridge Dictionary)






            share|improve this answer





















            • +1 This. Here's a reasonably authoritative linguistics site.
              – StoneyB
              36 mins ago













            up vote
            1
            down vote










            up vote
            1
            down vote









            Derivative:




            (specialized language) a form of something, such as a word, made or developed from another form:




            • "Detestable" is a derivative of "detest”.




            (Cambridge Dictionary)






            share|improve this answer












            Derivative:




            (specialized language) a form of something, such as a word, made or developed from another form:




            • "Detestable" is a derivative of "detest”.




            (Cambridge Dictionary)







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered 1 hour ago









            user240918

            24.1k967146




            24.1k967146












            • +1 This. Here's a reasonably authoritative linguistics site.
              – StoneyB
              36 mins ago


















            • +1 This. Here's a reasonably authoritative linguistics site.
              – StoneyB
              36 mins ago
















            +1 This. Here's a reasonably authoritative linguistics site.
            – StoneyB
            36 mins ago




            +1 This. Here's a reasonably authoritative linguistics site.
            – StoneyB
            36 mins ago












            up vote
            0
            down vote













            You could use: nominal form, nounal form or, as you yourself suggest, noun form.



            Merriam-Webster give the following definitions:




            nominal adjective ...



            of, relating to, or being a noun or a word or expression taking a noun construction





            nounal adjective ...



            of, relating to, or of the
            nature, function, or quality of a noun




            And noun can itself be used adjectivally, as it is in the terms noun phrase or noun class.





            A cursory glace through Google Books search results suggests nominal form gets extensive use in linguistics texts:




            Early Indo-European languages present a wide range of nominal constructions that convey verbal action and combine a noun and a nominal form of the verb...



            Archaic Syntax in Indo-European: The Spread of Transitivity in Latin, Brigitte Bauer (2011)




            Nounal form seems to be seen more in non-linguistics texts, though it is also used in linguistics too.



            Noun form seems to get the most general use, and is also used in linguistics as well.



            According to Google Ngram viewer, noun form also seems to be the most common of the three:
            Ngrams comparing "noun form", "nominal form", "nounal form"



            For what it's worth, to my mind, noun form is also the nicest - it's simple and straightforward. It's also exactly the words that came to your own mind when trying to find a term!



            Absent a more specific term for Semitic languages in general or Hebrew in particular (ask on Linguistics, perhaps, if that's what you want), I'd go for noun form.



            I'd also use verb rather than word, so your sentence would read:




            Thus, the verb and its noun form appear seven times in the chapter.







            share|improve this answer



























              up vote
              0
              down vote













              You could use: nominal form, nounal form or, as you yourself suggest, noun form.



              Merriam-Webster give the following definitions:




              nominal adjective ...



              of, relating to, or being a noun or a word or expression taking a noun construction





              nounal adjective ...



              of, relating to, or of the
              nature, function, or quality of a noun




              And noun can itself be used adjectivally, as it is in the terms noun phrase or noun class.





              A cursory glace through Google Books search results suggests nominal form gets extensive use in linguistics texts:




              Early Indo-European languages present a wide range of nominal constructions that convey verbal action and combine a noun and a nominal form of the verb...



              Archaic Syntax in Indo-European: The Spread of Transitivity in Latin, Brigitte Bauer (2011)




              Nounal form seems to be seen more in non-linguistics texts, though it is also used in linguistics too.



              Noun form seems to get the most general use, and is also used in linguistics as well.



              According to Google Ngram viewer, noun form also seems to be the most common of the three:
              Ngrams comparing "noun form", "nominal form", "nounal form"



              For what it's worth, to my mind, noun form is also the nicest - it's simple and straightforward. It's also exactly the words that came to your own mind when trying to find a term!



              Absent a more specific term for Semitic languages in general or Hebrew in particular (ask on Linguistics, perhaps, if that's what you want), I'd go for noun form.



              I'd also use verb rather than word, so your sentence would read:




              Thus, the verb and its noun form appear seven times in the chapter.







              share|improve this answer

























                up vote
                0
                down vote










                up vote
                0
                down vote









                You could use: nominal form, nounal form or, as you yourself suggest, noun form.



                Merriam-Webster give the following definitions:




                nominal adjective ...



                of, relating to, or being a noun or a word or expression taking a noun construction





                nounal adjective ...



                of, relating to, or of the
                nature, function, or quality of a noun




                And noun can itself be used adjectivally, as it is in the terms noun phrase or noun class.





                A cursory glace through Google Books search results suggests nominal form gets extensive use in linguistics texts:




                Early Indo-European languages present a wide range of nominal constructions that convey verbal action and combine a noun and a nominal form of the verb...



                Archaic Syntax in Indo-European: The Spread of Transitivity in Latin, Brigitte Bauer (2011)




                Nounal form seems to be seen more in non-linguistics texts, though it is also used in linguistics too.



                Noun form seems to get the most general use, and is also used in linguistics as well.



                According to Google Ngram viewer, noun form also seems to be the most common of the three:
                Ngrams comparing "noun form", "nominal form", "nounal form"



                For what it's worth, to my mind, noun form is also the nicest - it's simple and straightforward. It's also exactly the words that came to your own mind when trying to find a term!



                Absent a more specific term for Semitic languages in general or Hebrew in particular (ask on Linguistics, perhaps, if that's what you want), I'd go for noun form.



                I'd also use verb rather than word, so your sentence would read:




                Thus, the verb and its noun form appear seven times in the chapter.







                share|improve this answer














                You could use: nominal form, nounal form or, as you yourself suggest, noun form.



                Merriam-Webster give the following definitions:




                nominal adjective ...



                of, relating to, or being a noun or a word or expression taking a noun construction





                nounal adjective ...



                of, relating to, or of the
                nature, function, or quality of a noun




                And noun can itself be used adjectivally, as it is in the terms noun phrase or noun class.





                A cursory glace through Google Books search results suggests nominal form gets extensive use in linguistics texts:




                Early Indo-European languages present a wide range of nominal constructions that convey verbal action and combine a noun and a nominal form of the verb...



                Archaic Syntax in Indo-European: The Spread of Transitivity in Latin, Brigitte Bauer (2011)




                Nounal form seems to be seen more in non-linguistics texts, though it is also used in linguistics too.



                Noun form seems to get the most general use, and is also used in linguistics as well.



                According to Google Ngram viewer, noun form also seems to be the most common of the three:
                Ngrams comparing "noun form", "nominal form", "nounal form"



                For what it's worth, to my mind, noun form is also the nicest - it's simple and straightforward. It's also exactly the words that came to your own mind when trying to find a term!



                Absent a more specific term for Semitic languages in general or Hebrew in particular (ask on Linguistics, perhaps, if that's what you want), I'd go for noun form.



                I'd also use verb rather than word, so your sentence would read:




                Thus, the verb and its noun form appear seven times in the chapter.








                share|improve this answer














                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer








                edited 24 mins ago

























                answered 44 mins ago









                tmgr

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