When C and its associated tools were first being developed, input devices were not nearly as easy to use as modern keyboards. I've never actually used an ASR-33 Teletype, but as I understand it typing stringConcatenation on such a beast was significantly more difficult than typing strcat (and without autocompletion, you would have had to type the entire name with no typos). It took a substantial amount of pressure to activate each key. Output was also painfully slow my modern standards.
This also explains why common Unix command names are so terse (mv and cp rather than move or rename and copy).
And it's probably also why old linkers only supported such short names. Programmers would generally create short names in the first place, so there was little point in using scarce memory to allow for longer ones.
In addition to all this, there's a case to be made that shorter names are just as good as longer ones. Names of library functions, whether strcat or stringConcatenation (or is it stringConcatenate? String_Concatenate? stringCatenation?) are essentially arbitrary. Ease of typing isn't as important as it once was, but it's still a consideration.