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Emerging Creative Trends in English Communication and the Need for Neologisms
Emerging Creative Trends in English Communication and the Need for Neologisms
Thursday, 19 July 2018
Location: 717B (MTCC SOUTH BUILDING)
Distributed Paper
An incessant floods of Neologisms have swept in and the need is linked up to float a thought and invent an idea and communicate new concepts. Neologisms will be examined morphologically, etymologically, phonetically, semantically, contextually and to create, recreate, construct and reconstruct fresh contexts and also to suggest emerging future concepts. The creative writers, scholars, academicians, journalists and teachers are always on the lookout for new words, phrases and expressions to express and communicate new concepts, lend colour to their thoughts. Language, corpus-based but not corpus-bound, is a creative process with the immense potential to produce infinite number of words and sentences. A creatively geared writer can write different types of fiction, memoir, poetry, novel, non-Fiction, science-fiction, lyrics, play, script, travelogue and romance, features, interviews, criticism and reviews for newspapers, magazines and journals that require plenty of imagination, observation and the innate ability to paint word-pictures out of anything under the sun. If there is a Wordsmith dwelling inside the confines of one's heart, that can be set free so as to engage the ingenuous talents in creative writing either to use a liberal sprinkling of words or to use the imaginative power in order to make the work of art an enjoyable experience. An incessant torrential floods of Neologisms have swept in due to technological communication and intercultural development. The need for Neologisms is linked up to provide a hypothesis, float a thought and invent an idea Old familiar words acquire new meanings that include many different structural word formation types, novel derivations, clippings, back formations and various compounding processes which exemplify a wide range of semantic/pragmatic phenomena such as metaphor, metonymy, euphemism, and eponymy.