Knowing What a Word is

Louis Foley Babson College

Abstract

We seem naturally to think of “words” as definite units of language. Yet, on every hand there is continual confusion as to what constitutes a word. It is something quite different from a mere group of letters—unless or until a word is made out of them. And there is no clearer distinction in the structure of English than the difference between a compound word and a phrase. In much printed matter nowadays, however, these distinctions are largely ignored.

Journal
Journal of Technical Writing and Communication
Published
1974-01-01
DOI
10.2190/ha4j-0xv8-9rud-llvt
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