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Chapter 5 Compound & Complex Bases Morphology Lane 333
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Recap Stems: are bases to which affixes with grammatical meanings (grammatical affixes) are attached Bases have internal structure
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Compound lexemes Base may consist of two bases (both roots of which are free morphemes) in a head-dependency relation e.g: ‘houseplant’, ‘passwords’ This includes hyphenated compounds like ‘phone- booth)& Combination of two words with stress on first element (‘language expert’) Both function in the same way: -The houseplant looks close to death - The language expert looks close to death
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Compound lexemes The two bases and their meanings are associated with each other In (‘milkman’, ‘dustman’, ‘postman’, doorman’), man means “male person practicing a trade or profession” - not all carry the meaning of delivery
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Exercise 5.2 to what lexical categories do the two bases in the following words belong? What’s the meaning? matchboxhairbrush football stadium cat-basketbedroom flower vase
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Exercise 5.3 what do the structures of the following compounds mean? death-defyingtown planningrocking chair show-stopperboyfriendchurchgoer
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Complex lexemes Other multi-part bases are structured in more complicated ways Central element or root+ affixes (bound derivational or lexical), e.g. ‘sub-human’, ‘pack-age’, ‘de-select’, ‘confess-or’ Grammatical affixes must be added to the complete stem & not to the component parts; e.g. (‘confessors’ NOT *‘confessesors’)
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Exercise 5.4 which of the following lexemes are compound & which are complex? postboxpre-warpro-lifeweekly stronglystomach-achetone-poem
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Functions of affixes 1. It makes an A into a B (A & B are different lexical categories), e.g. the affix –less in ‘homeless’ changes the noun ‘home’ into an adjective ‘homeless’ 2. The B it makes has a particular sort of meaning (not having (an) X) where X is the root We have RECUURENCE: it’s not property to homeless alone (heartless, breathless, useless)
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Exercise 5.5 what do the following make into what? inter--age -ly- mono -est -ant/-ent (treat as of the same) arch--er/-or (treat as of the same) -ous
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Bound lexical morphemes Functions: signaling the lexical category of the word, e.g. (- er) OR carrying some kind of lexical meaning which is put together with that of what precedes or follows to build lexical meaning of the resultant word, e.g. (’mono’- means one)
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Exercise 5.10 what are the jobs of the following affixes in English? Conserv-ATION paint-ER affor-ABLE Muisc-ALhumid-ITY HYPER-active
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