Morphological structure of English words MORPHEMES Lecture 2



![ALLOMORPHS n Phonetic variants of one and the same morpheme Ex: please-pleasing [pliz-] pleasant ALLOMORPHS n Phonetic variants of one and the same morpheme Ex: please-pleasing [pliz-] pleasant](https://slidetodoc.com/presentation_image_h/fad0bd773cdd1a0a16f6bf26829a90ff/image-4.jpg)




























- Slides: 32
Morphological structure of English words (MORPHEMES) Lecture # 2 Grigoryeva M.
Language Units Morphemes n Word groups n Phraseological units n
MORPHEME n n morphe – “form” - eme “the smallest unit” Morphemes- are the smallest meaningful unit of form n cannot be segmented into smaller units n can occur in speech only as constituent parts of words n are divided into lexical morphemes and grammatical morphemes
ALLOMORPHS n Phonetic variants of one and the same morpheme Ex: please-pleasing [pliz-] pleasant [plez-]
morphemes roots affixes Functional Derivational (endings) prefixes suffixes
Lexical morphemes Free Roots n Bound Affixes n
BOUND morphemes FREE morphemes n n n coincide with a wordform may stand alone without changing its meaning can be only roots Ex. sport- in sportive n n n do not coincide with separate word-forms occur only as a constituent part of words are mostly derivational morphemes Ex. –ive in sportive;
Semantically n Root morphemes (radicals) n Non-root morphemes
A ROOT morpheme (RADICALS) is a lexical center of a word n has an individual lexical meaning common to a set of semantically related words (word-family) Ex to write, writer, writing n does not possess a part-of-speech meaning Ex cold water, to water flowers n
Non-root morphemes (Derivational) n Inflectional morphemes (inflections) endings n Affixational morpheme (affixes) prefixes functional suffixes derivational
Inflectional morphemes (inflections)endings- carry only grammatical meaning Ex –s (plural of nouns) - ed (Past Indefinite of regular verbs) n
A PREFIX n a derivational morpheme n stands before the root n modifies the word meaning Ex hearten – dishearten safe - unsafe
SUFFIX Derivational morpheme n Follows the root n Forms a new derivative in a different part of speech or a different word class Ex heart-en heart-y heart-less n
FUNCTIONAL AFFIXES n build different forms of one and the same word (a word-form) Ex. boy- boys, boy’s – boys’; take – takes; hearty – heartier – (the) heartiest
DERIVATIONAL AFFIXES build new words Ex to teach - a teacher n have a part-of-speech meaning Ex. to change – changeable to organize – organization n n are dependent on the root they modify (bound)
Structurally n Free morphemes n Bound morphemes n Semi-bound morphemes (semi-free)
Free morphemes n coincide with the stem or a word form Ex friendship
Bound morphemes Occur only as a constituent of a word (affixes are always bound morphemes) n Ex darkness impolite to dramatize
Semi-bound (semi-free) morphemes n Function in a morphemic sequence both as an affix and as a free morpheme Ex to sleep well half an hour (free morphemes – coincide with well- known half-done (bound morphemes- a part of the stem and the word-form) the word)
Completives (a combining form) n n n is a bound form a distinguishing feature from an affix---borrowed from another language occur in compounds (that didn’t exist in the original language and were formed in modern times) Ex aerogram ( Greek ------ aer = air) claustrophobia (Greek ----- claustrum=closed space phobia=fear) Beatlesmania (modern - Beatles Greek ---- mania = madness)
Splinters clipping the end or the beginning of a word to produce new words Miniminiature (minibus) Ecoecology (ecomenu) - burger hamburger (cheeseburger) - wich sandwich (turkeywich) n
Types of meaning n n Lexical Differential Part – of- speech Distributional
Lexical meaning Is individual for root-morphemes Ex Teach teacher teaching n Is generalizing for affixational morphemes Ex -en (the change of a quality) deepen deafened n
Some affixational morphemes with the same denotational meaning differ in conotation womanly - женственный womanlike женский - womanish бабий
Differential meaning n To distinguish one word from others containing identical morphemes Ex A bookshelf a book+case a book+stall
Part-of-speech meaning n In most cases affixational morphemes are indicative of the part of speech Ex -ment (noun) - less (adjective) - ize (verb)
Distributional meaning n The meaning of the order and arrangement of morphemes making up a word containing more than one morpheme sing- (to make musical sounds) Ex sing+er -er er+sing (the doer of the action) IMPOSSIBLE!
PRACTICE! Segment the given words into morphemes. Define the semantic type and the structural type of the morphemes Ex aimless aim + less n a)Semantically aim- is a root, -less is an affix b)Structurally aim- is a free morpheme, -less is a bound one Beggarly, postman, disaffected, half-eaten, rent-free
Beggarly BEG(G)- root, free - AR- affix, bound - LY affix, bound Disaffected DIS- affix, bound - AFFECT- root, free - ED affix, bound - Rent-free RENT- root, free - FREE root, free Postman POST - root, free - MAN affix, semi-bound Half-eaten HALF- affix, semi-bound - EAT- root, free - EN affix, bound
PRACTICE! n Translate the following words into Russian, taking into account the lexical meaning of the root and affixes EX weekly ----- еженедельно Week- a period of 7 days + -ly frequency Hostess, dehouse, eyelet, famous, prewar
Hostess host- (a person receiving guests) - tess (a woman) Dehouse de(the removal of) - house (a place for man habituation) Eyelet eye- let Famous fam(e)- (the condition of being known) - ous (possessing something) Prewar pre- war (body part for seeing) (a small kind of) (before) (a state of armed conflict)
PRACTICE! Classify the following words according to the part-of-speech meaning Ex criticism -ism (noun) Hatless, befriend, enlarge, boyhood, accordingly