Abstract

The objectives of this research are to know the type and examples of the word-formation process of the terms that appear during pandemic Covid-19. This research uses qualitative research. From the result analysis, some types of word-formation processes include borrowing, compounding, blending, acronym, clipping, and multiple processes. In borrowing, for example, the words “Rapid test” and “Swab test”. In compounding, for example, the words “handsanitizer, lockdown, coronacoma, coronaspeck and self-quarantine”. In blending, for example, the words ‘covid, covidiot, covidient, quarantini, infodemic, quaranteam, coronials, covexit, covidivorce, quaranteen and coroncation”. In clipping, for example, the words ‘sanny” and “iso”. The word “sanny’ comes from “hand sanitizer” and “Iso” comes from “isolation”. In the acronym, for example, the initials WFH (Work from Home), PPE (Personal Protective Equipment), WFO (Work from Office), and PUI (Person Under Investigation). In multiple processes for example the words “handwashing”, zoomboombing, coronababies, self-isolation”.

Highlights

  • The Corona pandemic, which lasted more than nine months, introduced the public to many new terms since March 2020

  • The objective of this research is to know the type of wordformation processes of the terms that appear during pandemic COVID-19

  • The data are taken from the mass media both electronic and mass media, and social media related to the terms that appear during pandemic COVID-19

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The Corona pandemic, which lasted more than nine months, introduced the public to many new terms since March 2020. All of these terms are popular in English. The words used to refer to the current pandemic situation (COVID-19) These terms are mostly derived from foreign languages such as English and are increasingly familiar to the public because they appear in various mass media. Many of the words we used during the COVID-19 pandemic such as 'social distancing' or 'quarantine' were formed (Horobin, 2020) This modern language aims to express people's fears about the biggest health problem in decades that we have ever experienced. The scale of our online connections means individuals have far more opportunities to coin a new term and share it beyond their immediate local communities

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call