Junctural metanalysis is the process by which new words are formed from confusion over the boundaries of words. It is sometimes referred to as "false splitting," "juncture loss," and is a form of back formation.
The most cited examples of junctural metanalysis involve of words which are preceded by the indefinite article ("a" or "an"): some words that began with an initial vowel gained an "n" as speakers came to associate the "n" from the indefinite article ("an") with the word itself. Examples include:
Conversely, sometimes words which began with an initial "n" lost it through a similar process:
Junctural metanalysis of a different sort, involving confusion over a final "s" rather than an initial "n", accounts for the word "pea". It was originally the singular Middle English mass noun pease (collective in that it refers not to a single unit, but to an amassing of the vegetable, akin to "corn").
Another example is "helicopter" from Greek `ελικο-πτερον = "* rotating wing(s)", but misdivided as "heli-copter", from which came modernisms such as "heli-backpack" and "heliport" and "jetcopter". Linguistic morphology
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"Junctural metanalysis".
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