Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
Some Questions about Morphology
2
What is a morpheme? The smallest linguistic unit of meaning
Can not be analyzed further ept, mit, luke, ceive are problematic examples yet they are morphemes
3
What is a derivational morpheme?
Adding a morpheme to a root to give a new word…often results in change in syntactic category
4
What is an inflectional morpheme?
Bound grammatical morphemes that are affixed to a word
5
Can you write down the eight inflectional morphemes in English
-s, -ed, -ing, -en, -s, ’s, -er, -est This makes English a very poorly inflected language but highly analytic language Historical reason was the shift in word stress
6
What is a free morpheme? Constitute words themselves; can stand on their own
7
Which is a more productive morpheme…un or able
able is more productive because it can be added to any verb but un has limitations Often there is a lexical gap: Unsad and ept
8
What is an infix? An affix inserted in the middle of the word.
9
Word Formation
10
What is a compound Joining two or more words to form a new word
Meaning may not always be inferred from the two morphemes and must be stored separately in the brain flatfoot, egghead
11
What is a back-formation?
words that came into existence from elimination of some affix…often this is done by mistake editor, hawker, stoker, hawker are all examples of back formations My daughter’s example of razor Some examples such as donation just show a normal morphological process
12
What is an acronym? Words derived from initials
Question: when do you use an article? FBI, CIA, CDC NAFTA, AIDS, OPEC But…UGA, KSU, IBM, NBC
13
What is the OED? Oxford English Dictionary
14
Who was Dr. Samuel Johnson?
Lexicographer; published Dictionary of the English Language in 1755
15
Two additional concepts
Idioms Metaphors
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.