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What teachers need to know about Morphology Basics What is morphology? It is the shape of linguistic units A morpheme is the smallest unit of language that has meaning A morpheme can be: • ‘morphos’ from Ancient Greek means ‘shape’ or ‘change’ • ‘eme’ means the smallest element of something • • • • A whole word: (chair, dragon, chocolate) A part of a word: (re, lect, est, er) A single phoneme: (s, or y) A word part that resembles a word: (able alone or -able in a word like comfortable) Morphological Awareness Morphological awareness is the understanding that words are made up of meaningful units such as • Prefixes, • root words, • and suffixes. Morphological awareness complements and extends phonological awareness Students learn that some syllables are meaningful word parts Students learn that common prefixes and suffixes have meanings Students are able to use morphemes to spell and read words Understandings for Teachers Component skills of morphological awareness are: • Knowing the parts of words and how they make up the structure of longer words • Using knowledge of morphemes to help with spelling • Using morphology to inform understanding of base words and derived forms of words Morphology is taught like phonemic awareness Activities for teaching morphological awareness: • Segmenting words into morphemes • Matching morphemes to their meanings • Using morphemes to make words Here’s Some Practice Segmenting Morphemes projector • pro • ahead ject throw or thing that does divide separate ed past tense undivided • • un not autobiography • auto • self bio life graph written y noun http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Greek_and_Latin_roots_in_English More Practice Segmenting Morphemes misplaced • mis • wrong place put ed past tense save keep er one that does lifesaver • • life living transaction • trans • across act do tion noun http://www.cognatarium.com/cognatarium/ Morphemes come in two types: Free and Bound Free Morphemes ● Can be used alone as words: • salamander, boat, candle ● Do not depend on any other word part to be words ● Can have one or more syllables Types of Free Morphemes-Function words • serve a grammatical function, but don’t have specific meanings on their own: for example… Function words Conjunctions • words that compound subjects, predicates, series, and sentences • or, and, but, so Prepositions • indicate place, time, or sequence • of, in, after, to Types of Free Morphemes-Function words Pronouns • refer to nouns and substitute for them • he, she, them Auxiliary verbs • help main verbs to show tense, voice, or to express implicit meaning using syntax • is, has, may have Definite Articles • are used with nouns to show degree of specificity of the reference • the, an, a Free morphemes can be: Content words – which are the most meaningful in the sentence Compound words – which are made of two free morphemes that keep their meanings, it is how new words of Anglo-Saxon origin are made • • • • nouns – person, place, thing, or idea verbs – action or state of being adverbs – add description to verbs adjectives - add description to nouns • sailboat, armchair, input Highlight the base word (free morpheme) from which the longer word is constructed. Activity: Identifying the free morpheme in words Activity: Identify and highlight the free morpheme in these words Masterful Masterful Unhappy Unhappy Activity: Identify and highlight the free morpheme in these words Adventurous Adventurous Refill Refill Activity: Identify and highlight the free morpheme in these words Hopefulness Hopefulness Childhood Childhood Activity: Identify and highlight the free morpheme in these words Antidisestablishmentarianism Antidisestablishmentarianism Misunderstand Misunderstand Bound Morphemes Must be combined with other morphemes to be a word: Are not a word by themselves Can have one or more syllables • e lect dis rupt tele graph Types of Bound Morphemes Prefixes-are added at the beginnings of words and add to or change the meaning of the base word or word root • pre ad mis Word Roots- provide the main meaning of the word • rupt ject tain Suffixes- are added to the ends of words and can indicate number, tense, or part of speech • es ing tion Identifyingcan Morphemes Identifying Morphemes be tough • You can start with the definition of the word part • You can find another word where that word part is used You need to think of the overall word and its meaning to decide if it has one or more than one morpheme • Mistletoe, salamander Sometimes the clues can mislead you • It isn’t enough to find little words in the big ones: napkin is not a compound word • A letter combination may be a morpheme in one word, but not in another: unhappy, under • Power: -er is a suffix, but not in this word • Mistletoe: mis- is a The structure prefix, but not in this of English word words is complex and • Period: peri- is a prefix, but not in this meaning can word be variable for example: • Comic: com- means with or together, but not in this word. Identify the number of syllables and then the number of morphemes in these words serious ser i ous lastly last ly crept crept sample 3 syllables 2 syllables 1 syllable sam ple 2 syllables serious 1 morpheme last ly 2 morphemes crept 1 morpheme sample 1 morpheme Identify the number of syllables and then the number of morphemes in these words heighten dangerous height en 2 syllables dan ger ous mixed mixed colder cold er height en 2 morphemes 3 danger ous 1 mix ed 2 2 cold er 2 2 In English, the most powerful morphemes are the suffixes which can be: Inflectional or Derivational Inflectional Suffixes: change the tense or number, but not the part of speech of the word cat – cats talk - talked Derivational Suffixes change the part of speech of the word Neutral derivational suffixes don’t change the sound or accent of the word quarter (n) –quarterly (adv) plenty (n)-plentiful (adj) Non-Neutral derivational suffixes can change the vowel pattern of the word When the accent pattern is changed, you can have an undifferentiated vowel sound or schwa (ә) in vite’– in vǝ ta’ tion e volve’ – ev’ ǝ lu tion Changes produced by derivational morphemes These suffixes make nouns: er, or, cian, ist sion , tion, These are persons These are things ment , ity These make verbs: This one makes adverbs: These make adjectives: ize, ify ly ar, ous, ive, al, ful Identify the Inflectional or Derivational Suffixes -s, -es -ful -er, -est inflectional –changes number derivational- adjective or adverb inflectional—comparative adjective derivational—verb to noun sing/singer -ed inflectional—changes tense -tion derivational- makes nouns Identify the part of speech of each word in these pairs. move verb movement noun nature natural adjective noun ignite verb ignition noun liquid noun liquify verb comment verb commentator noun Rule: The inflectional suffix is added on after the derivational suffix when making a word with a derivational ending plural, past, comparative, or possessive fun – funny – funniest ring – ringer- ringers name – nameless – namelessness What do we teach and when? Morphology by grade level: • As you teach suffixes, 1st & 2nd Grade teach their meanings • Teach that longer words are made of parts • Teach the most common 3rd to 6th Grades prefixes, roots, and suffixes Middle School and • Teach those morphemes essential for reading in High School your content area K-12 • Teach about the language of your subject when teaching meanings of key terms Here is a website that has morphology lesson plans and activities. http://www.freereading.net/index.php?title=Prefixes_and_Suffixes_Activities A Resource for Teaching Morphology Mini Lesson for Prefix pre- pre- Words prepay preview pretest prejudge preheat preteen pre test pretest pre view preview pre pay prepay pre judge prejudge pre heat preheat pre teen preteen How does morphemic awareness help our students? • Understanding morphology develops language skills through: Decoding • Promotes quicker and more accurate word reading Vocabulary • Expands from unknown words to known words and word parts Comprehension Spelling • Provides grammatical information that helps with connected text reading • Helps with non-phonetic English spellings Thank you for your interest in Morphology Mary Beth Calhoon, Ph.D. Associate Professor Lehigh University [email protected]