combining form

English

Etymology

1871 attestation.

Noun

combining form (plural combining forms)

  1. (grammar) A type of word part; a bound morpheme; used in combination with a word, a different combining form, or an affix to form a new word.
    • 2007, Matthews, P. H., “combining form”, in The concise Oxford dictionary of linguistics, 2nd edition, Oxford [u.a.]: Oxford University Press, →ISBN, pages 63–64:
      Common in English, where in some putative compounds, such as autocrat or technocrat, both members would be combining forms.
    • For more examples of usage of this term, see Citations:combining form.
  2. (computing, typography) A character encoded from a sequence of other characters instead of a precomposed character.
    • 2014 April 10, “XML Entity Definitions for Characters (2nd Edition)”, in David Carlisle, Patrick Ion, editor, w3.org, World Wide Web Consortium, retrieved 2015-03-22:
      As far as possible this specification uses non-combining characters, however, in the cases tdot, TripleDot and DotDot Unicode only has combining forms of the accents, and so the entity replacement text starts with a space, to avoid the possibility that the expansion of the entity combines with preceding text.

Translations

See also

References

Further reading

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