MORPHOLOGY
DEFINITION
OF MORPHOLOGY
Morphology
is a branch of linguistics that deals with struction and a form of a word in a
language.
WHAT IS A WORD?
Smallest
independent units of language.
All
words can be devided into 2 categories :
1.
Content words
Content words are a word that
have a clear lexical meaning, this classes compose of nouns, verbs, adjectives,
and adverbs. There word from people, things, actions, ideas, and attributes.
Content words are considered and open class, because new words can be added.
2.
Function words
Function words, in the other
hand do not have a clear lexical meaning, but do serve a functional in
professional language. There are words such as conjunctions, articles,
preposition, and pronouns. Function words are considered a close class, because
generally speaking do not make addition to this category.
MORPHEME
Morphemes - the building blocks of morphology
Words are make
up of one piece, but many other words make up more than one piece, more than
one component and this component are called morpheme.
Words
have internal structure: built of even smaller pieces
1. Simple words: don't have internal
structure (only consist of one morpheme)
eg work, build, run. They can't be split into smaller parts which carry meaning
or function.
2. Complex words: have internal
structure (consist of two or more morphemes)
eg worker: affix -er added to the root work to form a noun.
Morpheme
is a minimal unit of a meaning, so well some words can consist of one morpheme,
most words can consist more than one morpheme. Morphemes are devided into 2
types :
1. Free
morpheme
2. Bound
morpheme
FREE VS BOUND MORPHEMES
Free morpheme: a simple word, consisting of one morpheme eg
house, work, high, chair, wrap. They are words in themselves.
Bound morpheme: morphemes that must be attached to another
morpheme to receive meaning.
EG: UNKINDNESS
- UN- and -NESS are the bound morphemes, requiring the root KIND to form the word.
These are also called affixes as they are attached to the stem. There are two types
as outlined below:
1. Derivational Affixes
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Discussion
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In contrast to an inflectional
affix, a derivational affix
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Examples (English)
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2. Inflectional affixes
There are a large number of derivational affixes in English. In contrast,
there are only eight "inflectional affixes" in English, and these are
all suffixes. English has the following inflectional suffixes, which serve a variety
of grammatical functions when added to specific types of words. These
grammatical functions are shown to the right of each suffix.
-s noun plural
-'s noun possessive
-s verb present tense third person singular
-ing verb present participle/gerund
-ed verb simple past tense
-en verb past perfect participle
-er adjective comparative
-est adjective superlative
-s noun plural
-'s noun possessive
-s verb present tense third person singular
-ing verb present participle/gerund
-ed verb simple past tense
-en verb past perfect participle
-er adjective comparative
-est adjective superlative
References :
Your presentation is nice. I got the some information about morphology especially affix,surfix etc..thank you😁
BalasHapusThank you for enjoying my presentation and for the comment .
Hapushallo fella. i like your style when you persentasion in front of class. and really give new knowledge for us about morphology :D
BalasHapusHi fariza😀 thank you for enjoying it and I'm to know that someone can understand. About my material
Hapusbefore, thanks' for your explaination. but i have a question to asked u. actually, inflection affixes can't change the meaning of a word or its part of speech. so can u explain, how can be "gerund" include into inflection affixes? while, we know that gerund is 'verb+ing' and change to be noun. thank you :)
BalasHapusThank you for the question darly. You're right about inflection doesnt change the meaning of a word,and inflection suffix of -ing ,it just a struction or just a form. So let's just focus on the struction or form off a word. Hope that can answer your question :)
HapusHi fella.... you are a nice speaker today.... but you didn't explain clearly about gerund. actually it's not gerund but in morpheme ing, there is a function as progressive aspect, something like providing etc.
BalasHapusYour blog and presentation is very helpfull to increase my knowledge :))
BalasHapusHai fella. Thnks for your information about morphology. I get some points about that. Please tell me, what is a link between morphology and phonology ? Thnks fella 😁
BalasHapusHi fella. Your presentation is very interesting. And it is very useful for us.
BalasHapusFella, give me more example of morphology!
BalasHapusHi Fella, can you explain about free vs bound morphemes? Thanks
BalasHapusExplain to me inflectional affixes!
BalasHapuscan you explain about Inflectional affixes?
BalasHapusso,can you make example that Derivational Affixes is different with Inflectional affixes?
BalasHapushii fella, can you give me the example of content word and functiation word? thank you..
BalasHapusHi fellong can you give me explaine about inflectional affixes thank you
BalasHapushi fella, could you tell me different of morphology, phonology and phonetics ?
BalasHapusHi fellong can you give me explaine about inflectional affixes thank you
BalasHapus