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Derivational morphemes
Viktoriya POLTAVETS SÖNMEZ
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I. Morphology Morph (form) + ology (science of)
-- > Morphology (the science of word forms) The study of the internal structure of words The rules by which words are formed
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Traditionally, the term “morphology” refers to the study of “morphemes”.
But…what’s a morpheme?
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I. 1. What is morpheme? Dictionary: Morpheme (môr'fēm') n.
A meaningful linguistic unit consisting of a word, such as man, or a word element, such as -ed in walked, that cannot be divided into smaller meaningful parts. morphemic mor·phem'ic adj. morphemically mor·phem'i·cal·ly adv.
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A morpheme is a piece of phonological information that has a conventionalized meaning arbitrarily associated with it. EX: speak (v.) + -er = speaker (n.) The “-er” that changes “speak” to “speaker” is a part of what’s known as the derivational morphology of English. Derivational morphology deals with morphemes that change the lexical category of the word they are added to. Since “-er” changes “speak”, a verb, to “speaker”, a noun, we can say it derives the noun “speaker” from the verb “speak”.
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I.1.1.Derivational morphemes
Far more numerous than inflectional morphemes Allow productivity (involved in the coining of new words) Can be prefixes, or suffixes Suffixes usually, but not always, change word class Prefixes, usually don’t
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Derivational morphemes derive one word from another.
They have the following properties: - They affect the meaning of the morpheme that they attach to. E.g. re- means to redo the process, de- means to undo the process, un- means not…. - They can change the grammatical category of the word they attach to. E.g. noun becomes adjective, adjective becomes verb, etc. - They can be used to create new words, such as debug, reboot, unbirthday, etc.
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English Affixes (based on the position)
Prefix: An affix that occurs before a morpheme It changes the type of meaning of the word. Suffix: An affix that occurs after a morpheme It changes the category and/or the type of meaning of the word, so it is said to create a new word. e.g. suffix –ment in government
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English Prefixes Examples of Negative Prefixes: un- non- dis- a-
Examples of size and degree prefixes: mini- sub- over- super-
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English Suffixes Class preserving suffixation: -er lecturer
-ian librarian -ist scientist -let piglet Class changing suffixation: Verb Noun perform performance Adjective Adverb nice nicely Adjective Noun active activity
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Some examples of English Derivational Morpheme
-ic : Noun Adj ; alcohol alcoholic -ance : Verb Noun ; clear clearance -ly : Adj Adv ; exact exactly -ity : Adj Noun ; active activity -able : Verb Adj ; read readable -ship : Noun Noun ; friend friendship re : Verb Verb ; cover recover in- : Adj Adj ; definite indefinite
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How to teach derivation morphemes in the classroom?
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Add the prefix un to each word.
ACTIVITY 1. The prefix un means the opposite. happy Un + happy = Un + lock = lock zip Un + zip = Sixth grade
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dis + like = …………………………………………….
ACTIVITY 2. Add the prefix dis to each word The prefix dis means the opposite. like dis + like = ……………………………………………. agree dis + agree =………………………………………. connect dis + connect = …………………………….
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1 My bedroom is always……………………… .
Complete the sentences. Use the negative form of the adjectives in the box. 1 My bedroom is always……………………… . 2 Everyone does things differently – you shouldn’t be ……………………… . 3 It’s ……………………… if you don’t say ‘Thank you’ in English. 4 I bought a new bed because the old one was quite ……………………… . 5 I think it’s ……………………… to get all the answers correct! 6 He laughed at her when she was upset. He’s very ……………………… . 7 Our new neighbours are a bit ……………………… . They didn’t say ‘hello’ this morning Wait a minute! Don’t be so ……………………… . Comfortable,friendly, patient, polite, possible, sensitive, tidy, tolerant.
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REFERENCES: Akkan, Hakan "Turkish EFL Learners' Awareness and Use of English Morphology in Guessing the Meanings of Unknown Words from Context: A Case Study" Yule,G. (2006). The study of language. United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press.
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