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Published byBetty Greene Modified over 9 years ago
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Morphology The Study of the Internal Structure of Words
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What Is Morphology? Many words can be broken down into smaller units Morphology is the study of word formation Morphologists identify different classes of morphemes, and study the patterns that occur in the combination of morphemes E.G. : {re-} only comes before verbs
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The Smallest Meaningful Unit What does it mean to be the smallest meaningful unit in a language? Divide the following sentence into the smallest meaningful units: I have two dogs. I / have / two / dogs. I / have / two / dog / -s.
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Morphemes Meaningful units “I have two cats” “She wants to leave soon” “He walked across the room” “Her behavior was unbelievable”
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Morphemes Free Can stand alone {eye, think, run, apple} Bound Can not stand alone Has to be attached to a free morpheme {-able, un-, -s, -tion, -ly}
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Morpheme Types Root The morpheme that is the semantic core “unthinkable” “realization” “distrust” Affixes Bound morpheme that attaches to roots {-s, un-, de-, -en, -able, -ize, -hood} Base/Stem Anything to which an affix is attached root {un.think.able} base
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Affixes The most common way to build new words Prefix Suffix Infix Affix
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Prefixes Prefix An affix that attaches to the front of a root {un-, dis-, de-, mis-} Example: {in-} indecent
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Prefixes Karok [pasip]“Shoot!” [nipasip]“I shoot” [/upasip]“She/he shoots” {pasip} “shoot {ni-}“1st person singular” {/u-}“3rd person singular” (Karok is a Hokan language of California. The language has been in decline, but some young people are working to keep their ancestral language alive.)Hokan
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Suffixes Suffix An affix that attaches to the end of a root {-able, -ing, -ed, -s} Most common affix Example: {-ful} careful
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Suffixes Mende [pElE]“house” [pElEi]“the house” [mEmE]“glass” [mEmEi]“the glass” {-i}“the” (Mende, Bandi, and Loko belong to the southwestern group of Mende and are spoken in Sierra Leone/Liberia, northeastern Liberia, and north-central Sierra Leone, respectively.)
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Infix Infix An affix that attaches within the root No ‘standard’ English example, though examples exist in slang: ‘abso-darn-lutely’ ‘un-freaking-likely’
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Infix Bontoc [fikas]“strong” [fumikas]“she is becoming strong” [fusul]“enemy” [fumusal]“she is becoming an enemy” {-um-}“becoming” ( Bontoc is the name given by linguists to the language spoken in the municipality of Bontoc, Mountain Province in the northern Philippines. )
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Affix Affix General term to cover all the previous terms Affixes can attach to other affixes boy. ish. ness dis. en. tangle
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