Minimizers are a highly
productive class, and new examples can be readily formed from a variety of domains. Early surveys of minimizers across a range of living and dead languages found that some recurring categories included: • Small items of food (e.g. a cherrystone, an egg, a fig, a grain, a parsnip) • Coins of little value (e.g. a
dinero, a
sou, a dime) • Animal and body parts (e.g. a cat's tail, a hair, a sparrow) • Other miscellaneous objects of little value or relevance (e.g. a pinecone, a shred, a nail) Another category of minimizers is
superlative expressions such as "the foggiest idea" or "the slightest inkling". Some minimizers are limited to very specific, fixed idiomatic verb phrases (e.g. "move a muscle", "lift a finger", "sleep a wink"), whereas others are highly versatile, such as the
semantically bleached shit: : I'm not paying him shit. : I'm not saying shit without a lawyer present. : You can search my car, but you're not going to find shit. Other minimizers are limited to representing only a certain kind of quantity. For example,
word may only be used with predicates which take an object of a linguistic nature: : She didn't speak a word. : I don't believe a word of your story. : I can't understand a word of Italian. : # He doesn't care a word about his colleagues. (The
# symbol marks the last sentence as
infelicitous.) ==Role in language change==