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Morphology 5.1, 5.3 (Ex. p 154 #0, 1) Homework: 5.2 (due 3/19)
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Morphology Up to this point we have studied the sounds of English and how they interact in systematic ways The next step: Strings of language sounds form units of meaning
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Morphology Morphology is the study of how units of meaning are formed
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Morphology How many units of meaning are present in the following sentence: my shoes are untied
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Morphology Or in this sentence: I waited for her all morning
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Morphology Or in this sentence: those socks are smelly
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Morphology *Morpheme — the smallest unit of meaning in a language –i.e., it cannot be subdivided into smaller units of meaning
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Morphology We usually think of morphemes as bases/stems affixes
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Stem *Base / stem — the meaning unit that affixes attach to This is the core of the word, which has the lexical meaning that is added to in some way by an affix
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Morphology *Affixes – attach to bases/stems
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Affixes Prefixes attach to the front of a stems or words (in-)sight (dis-)arm (un-)aware
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Affixes Suffixes — attach to the end of stems or words try(-ing) examin(-ation) navig(-ate) rect(-ify)
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Affixes Infixes – attach in the middle of a word Karl (-the mailman-) Malone, etc. fan(-f…-)tastic a(-whole-)nother thing
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Morphology Through the systematic interaction of morphemes, the units of meaning of a language are formed Part of what we know when we know a language is how morphemes interact
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Morphology Some morphemes show variation in use Colder More beautiful
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Morphology Adjectives / Adverbs (-er) ‘more’ slower (-est) ‘most’slowest Can we make a descriptive rule for this variation?
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Morphology *Allomorph: Variants of morphemes That is, variations in the form of the morpheme, with each form having the same meaning
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Allomorphs Plural (-s) morpheme /z/ /əz/ /s/ beds sashes hats Question: Which is basic plural in English?
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Allomorphs Possessive (-s) /z/ Bill’s /əz / Marcus’s /s/ Clark’s
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Allomorphs 3Person Singular /z/ reads /əz/ watches /s/ hits
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Allomorphs *RULE: after voiced sounds, /z/ after sibilants, /əz/ after other voiceless sounds /s/ [sound familiar?]
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More Allomorphs Past tense (–ed): /d/ feared, burned, cried /t/wished, kissed [for some, burnt, learnt] /əd/ heated, mended
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More Allomorphs RULE: after voiced sounds, /d/ after voiceless sounds, /t/ after alveolar stops, /ed/
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Allomorphs We can see that many allomorphs in English are phonologically conditioned — Their form is determined by neighboring sounds Cf. Spanish: amigos (in Spanish, no such conditioning)
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Allomorphs Other allomorphs in English: pres. part. (-ing)[ən], [i ŋ ] ‘playing’ free variation (only stylistic variation)
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Allomorphs Unlike Inactive Impossible Illogical Irreversible What rule produced these allomorphs?
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Morphology Lexical categories: I. Content words: have lexical meaning II. Grammar words: provide primarily grammatical information
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Lexical categories I. *Content words (form class words) Content (form class) words change form to fit into the grammar — pitch (V.) → pitcher (n.)
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Content words 1. Constitute most of vocabulary — by far the greatest number of words
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Content words (form class words) 2. Have lexical meaning — that is, they mean something — table, floor, eat (Nouns, Verbs, Ajs., Avs.)
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Content words (form class words) 3. Open category: New ones can come into the language at any time — CDRom; mouse; blog; google; mcjob
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Lexical categories II. *Grammatical (function class) words 1.Smallest part of vocabulary — only a small fraction of words
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Grammatical (function class) words 2.Primarily grammatical meaning — and, but, on, under, who, etc. These not so much mean things as signify grammatical relationships
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Grammatical (function class) words 3.Closed class — unchanging grammatical structure words No new ones
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Morphology Content (Form Class) words in English may take inflectional morphemes or derivational morphemes
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*Inflectional morphemes 1.Contain grammatical information 2.Do not change word class 3.Suffixes only
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Inflectional morphemes Inflectional morphemes of English: N — pl. (-s) two shoes –p possessive (-s) a dog’s breakfast
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Inflectional morphemes V — 3 person sing. –s She eats at noon. –pres. participle –ingare eating –past tense (-ed) earned $20 –past participle (–en) has eaten [includes (-ed), vowel change]
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Inflectional morphemes Adj / Adv— (-er) slower (-est) slowest English has these 8 exactly
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Derivational morphemes *Derivational morphemes of English participate in deriving new words 1.Change word meaning — (im-) port (un-) do
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Derivational morphemes 2. Can change word class (-er) driv-er, can open-er noun making (-ation) inform-ation noun making (-ize) real-ize verb making (-al) individu-aladjective making (-ious) delic-iousadj. making
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Derivational morphemes 3. May be suffix or prefix (un-)like(-ly) (im-)practic(-al)
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Morphology *Word Formation — Note sequence in which morphemes are attached to stems and words: Smell-y Tie → un-tie → un-tie-d form → re-form → re-form-ation Veri-fy →veri-fi-able → un-veri-fi-able
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Word formation Native speakers of a language know which combinations are possible and which are actual ?saltish crackers ?sugary cookies ?three-years-old girl
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Inflection vs. Suppletion Contrast Spanish and English verb patterns: Spanish ser conjugation Yo soynosotros somos Tu eres(vosotros sois) ustedes son El esellos son
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Suppletion The English be verb paradigm: –I amwe are –You areyou are –He / she / it isthey are demonstrates suppletion — separate items used to produce forms in a grammatical pattern
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Suppletion More examples in English: go / went person / people good / better bad / worse
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Word formation These elements of word formation are an important component of the fundamental, complex knowledge we have of our language
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