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Published byElaine Cameron Modified over 9 years ago
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Morphology Chapter 7 Prepared by Alaa Al Mohammadi
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What is Morphology? What is a ‘word’?
Items marked in black separated by spaces? What about the ‘thecatsatonthemat’? In Swahili the form ‘nitakupenda’ stands for what we might say in English ‘I will love you’? What about the word ‘replayed’ and ‘play’? The concept ‘word’ turns out to be a complex fuzzy category. Depend on ‘elements’ rather than ‘words’
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Definitions Morphology is the branch of linguistics that studies the structure of words. = the study of how words are built = set of morphemes + the rules of how they are combined How words are put together out of smaller pieces morphemes e.g. replayed consists of re+play+ed
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Morpheme A minimal unit of meaning or grammatical function
Minimal= can’t be broken down any further. Meaning? Grammatical function? renewable Tourists re + new + able tour + ist + s
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Morphemes A word that contains more than one morpheme is a morphologically complex word One morpheme is the basic one, the core of the form root or stem The add-ons bound morphemes are affixes E.g. ‘rearranged’ ‘teachers’
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Free vs. Bound morphemes
Types of morphemes Free vs. Bound morphemes Free Bound Can stand alone as separate words Cannot occur on their own as separate words Single morphemes e.g. hunt, kill, the, play, child, book. Affixes -s in dogs -ness in happiness -ed in walked
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Free Morphemes Divided into : Lexical morphemes vs. Functional Morphemes. Lexical morphemes Functional morphemes a.k.a content words: carry the content of the message a.k.a function words Includes nouns, verbs, adjective, adverbs such as, children, love, beauty, play, sing Include pronouns, articles, conjunctions, prepositions as, the, on, from, and, in, etc. Open class word Close class words
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Bound Morphemes Affixation
Prefix: An affix that is attached to the front of a base, e.g. re-play. Suffix: An affix that is attached to the end of a base, e.g. kind-ness. Infix: An affix that occur within a base, e.g. (in Indonesian) s-in-ambung.
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Bound Morphemes Divided into derivational vs. inflectional morphemes.
Derivational morphemes make new words in a language- different grammatical category from the stem e.g. suffix –ness in happiness Inflectional morphemes indicate aspects of grammatical function of a word. e.g. suffix –ed in walked indicate past tense
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Derivation vs. Inflection
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 It does not change either the grammatical category or the type of meaning found in the word. e.g. suffix –s in books Bound morphemes always appear in order, first derivational then inflectional. E.g. teachers
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English Inflectional Morphemes
Nouns –s plural –’s possessive Verbs –s third person singular present –ed past tense –en past participle –ing progressive Adjectives –er comparative –est superlative
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Some examples of English Derivational Morpheme
-ic : Noun Adj ; alcohol alcoholic -ly : Adj Adv ; exact exactly -ate : Noun Verb ; vaccin vaccinate -ity : Adj Noun ; active activity -ship : Noun Noun ; friend friendship re : Verb Verb ; cover recover
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Categories of Morphemes
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The girl’s wildness shocked the teacher
Analyzing words The girl’s wildness shocked the teacher The functional girl lexical -s inflectional Wild lexical -ness derivational Shock lexical -ed inflectional The functional Teach lexical -er derivational
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Morphs and allomorphs Phoneme and allophone?
Morphs are the actual realization of morphemes. Morphemes are abstract units- morphs are discrete. Some morphemes are realized by one or more morphs according to their position in a word or a sentence allomorph
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Morphs and allomorphs Morpheme of plurality represented as -s
E.g Cats – digs – forces Allomorphs are represented {-s}, {-z} and {-iz} Phonetic influence of neighboring sound Allomorphs for the morpheme of past tense –ed?
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Describe the italic affixes:
impossible terrorized terrorize desks dislike humanity fastest Derivational prefix Inflectional suffix Derivational suffix
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Describe the italic affixes:
premature untie darken fallen oxen faster lecturer Derivational prefix Derivational suffix Inflectional suffix
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Analyze different types of morphemes
The young boy played with his friends. The Young Boy Play -ed With His Friend -s Functional Lexical Inflection inflectional
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