A
bahuvrihí (?????????), or
bahuvrihi compound (also
exocentric compound), is a type of
nominal compound that refers to something that is not specified by any of its parts by themselves (i.e., it is
headless or
exocentric, its core semantic value being subsumed by an elliptical or 'external' semantic value so that the compound is not a
hyponym of the head), especially a compound that refers to a possessor of an object specified a bahuvrihi compound XY tends to mean someone or something which has a Y, and that Y has the characteristic X. For instance, a
sabertooth (
smil-odon) is neither a
saber nor a
tooth it is an extinct feline with saber-like fangs. English bahuvrihis often describe people by referring to specific properties
flatfoot,
half-wit,
highbrow,
lowlife,
redhead,
tenderfoot,
longlegs, and
white-collar. Many of these are
colloquial,
pejorative, or both.
The term bahuvrihi was first used by Sanskrit grammarians, and is a specific Sanskrit example a compound consisting of bahu (much) and vrihi (rice).
The last constituent in a Sanskrit bahuvrihi is a noun, more strictly a nominal stem. The whole compound is an adjective and agrees in gender and number with the head. The accent is regularly on the first member (tatpurusha raja-pútra "a king's son", but bahuvrihi rajá-putra "having kings as sons" (viz rajá-putra- (m.) "father of kings", rajá-putra- (f.) "mother of kings"), with the exception of a number of non-nominal prefixes such as the privative a; the word "bahuvrihí" is itself likewise an exception to this rule.
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