Morphology Morphology The study of words Studies the
- Slides: 16
Morphology
Morphology • The study of words • Studies the internal structure, and how they are created and formed.
• A word is a string of small meaningful symbols • Those meaningful symbols are called morphemes. • Morphemes are the smallest meaningful units in a word. • A morpheme can has a meaningful meaning, or a meaningful ‘grammatical function’.
Morphemes Free Bound
Derivation vs Inflection
Derivational morphology
lexical categories • open lexical category (content words) • nouns, verbs, adjectives, and adverbs. • closed lexical category (function words) • pronouns, determiners (the, this, a, your etc. ), prepositions, and conjunctions (and, or, but).
Cat Catty Form: /kæt/ /kæti/ Meaning: domesticated feline spiteful, (fighting) like a domesticated feline Lexical Category: Noun Simply, it is about adding little things to the root. Those added pieces are called ‘affixes’. The form in which an affix is added to is called the base or the stem. So, ‘cat’ is both a root and a stem. Adjective Cat is the root for catty A derivational process is the one in which one operation or more is applied on a form of a word to make a new word of a different lexical category.
• Affixes: • prefixes • suffixes • infixes • circumfixes • interfixes • transfixes
Inflectional morphology
Cat Cats Form /kæt/ /kæts/ Meaning domesticated feline (plural) Lexical Category Noun The creation of different grammatical forms of a word is called inflection
List of Inflectional Affixes in English Function Affix(es) Attaches to Example 3 rd personal singular present -s verbs He waits there at noon. Past tense -ed Verbs He waited there yesterday. Progressive aspect -ing Verbs He is waiting there now Past participle -en, -ed Verbs He has eaten the cookies. He has tasted the cookies. Plural -s Nouns The students are in the classroom. Possessive -’s , -s’ Nouns The student’s book. The students’ books. Comparative -er Adjectives, Adverbs Ahmed is taller than Ali. Ahmed is faster than Ali. Superlative -est Adjectives, Adverbs Ahmed is the tallest in class. Ahmed runs fastest of all.
Morphological Processes
• Affixation: Using prefixes and suffixes. e. g. eats, cats, playing • • • Compounding: Forming new words by joining two or more independent words. e. g. girlfriend , textbook, airconditioner, aircraft carrier, lifeguard chair. Reduplication: Forming new words by doubling either an entire free morpheme (total reduplication) or part of it (partial reduplication). e. g. bye-bye, ta-ta, (In Taglog: ibu =mother --> ibuibu = mothers) Alternations: Made by making morpheme internal modifications. e. g. man --> men , goose --> geese, foot --> feet, feed ---> fed , swim --> swam ---> swum
Morphological Types of languages
Languages Analytic Synthetic made up of sequences of free morphemes bound morphemes are attached to other morphemes, so a word may be made up of several meaningful elements. ex: Mandarin Chinese [ wɔ mən tɑn tçin ] I plural play piano ‘We are playing the piano’ ex: Hungarian [ ɔz ɛmber lɑ: tjɔ ɔ kuca: t ] the man-(subject) sees the dog(object) ‘The man sees the dog’ [ ɔ kucɔ lɑ: tjɔ ɔz ɛmbert ] the dog sees the man-(object) ‘The dog sees the man’
- Inflectional morpheme
- Paradigm shift from women studies to gender studies
- Mesial surface of tooth
- Succotash morphemes
- Outdoor ed study design
- Vce legal studies study design
- Theatre studies study design
- Process of word formation
- Morphology words
- Hypenated compound words
- Morphology tree diagram
- Case series
- Retrospective cohort study
- What is work study in management
- Study less study smart
- Phytogeographic regions of india
- Differentiate between time study and motion study