Download MORPHEMES ARE WORD PARTS THAT CARRY MEANING

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Chinese grammar wikipedia , lookup

Untranslatability wikipedia , lookup

Lithuanian grammar wikipedia , lookup

Kannada grammar wikipedia , lookup

Macedonian grammar wikipedia , lookup

Ojibwe grammar wikipedia , lookup

Pleonasm wikipedia , lookup

Esperanto grammar wikipedia , lookup

Portuguese grammar wikipedia , lookup

Japanese grammar wikipedia , lookup

Old Irish grammar wikipedia , lookup

Modern Hebrew grammar wikipedia , lookup

Modern Greek grammar wikipedia , lookup

Old Norse morphology wikipedia , lookup

Compound (linguistics) wikipedia , lookup

Spanish grammar wikipedia , lookup

French grammar wikipedia , lookup

Swedish grammar wikipedia , lookup

Scottish Gaelic grammar wikipedia , lookup

Ukrainian grammar wikipedia , lookup

Russian grammar wikipedia , lookup

Ancient Greek grammar wikipedia , lookup

Lexical semantics wikipedia , lookup

Italian grammar wikipedia , lookup

Yiddish grammar wikipedia , lookup

Old English grammar wikipedia , lookup

Turkish grammar wikipedia , lookup

Malay grammar wikipedia , lookup

Icelandic grammar wikipedia , lookup

Latin syntax wikipedia , lookup

Serbo-Croatian grammar wikipedia , lookup

Polish grammar wikipedia , lookup

Pipil grammar wikipedia , lookup

Inflection wikipedia , lookup

Agglutination wikipedia , lookup

Morphology (linguistics) wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
MORPHEMES ARE WORD PARTS THAT CARRY
MEANING
How many morphemes are in the following?
 True
 Truthful
 Truest
 Truthfulness
 Untruthfulness
MORPHEMES ARE WORD PARTS THAT CARRY
MEANING
•  Some morphemes can stand alone such as (House and
Tree)
•  Some morphemes cannot stand alone and must be
bound to other words (un, er, ness)
Inflections and Inflectional Morphemes
What is an inflection?
Inflections are morphemes that change the meaning of
the word in some way.
•  Example in a verb: WalkWalked (past tense)
•  Example in a noun: BookBooks (plural)
•  Example of possessive: StudentStudent s
Some languages like LATIN are considered INFLECTIONAL
languages. That means the meaning in a sentence is
conveyed by endings on verbs, nouns, and adjectives.
EXAMPLE: The sentences below all mean the same thing.
Word order is not relevant. The endings(Inflections) convey
the meaning.
Agricola vidit lupum
Lupum vidit agricola
The farmer saw the wolf.
(All say this regardless of word order)
Agricola lupum vidit
Unlike Latin, meaning in English is achieved through
WORD ORDER.
English contains both inflectional and derivational
morphemes.
English Inflections
English inflections or inflectional morphemes
•  Past Tense for verbs
•  3rd person singular for verbs
•  Plural noun (s, es)
•  Possessives for nouns ( s, s )
•  Past participle of verb (ed)
•  Present Participle (ing)
•  Adjective Inflections (er/est)
Note: Inflectional morphemes in English do not change the lexical
category of a word. A verb is still a verb.
(Walk/Walks/Walked)
MORE ABOUT INFLECTIONAL MORPHEMES
•  Inflectional morphemes can be characterized as
affixes.
•  Each inflectional affix may be attached to many stems.
•  Inflectional affixes are generally suffixes. They are
never prefixes.
• A few are infixes such as goose/geese, and foot/feet.
Derivational Morphemes
While inflectional morphemes DO NOT CHANGE THE
LEXICAL CATEGORY of a word, DERIVATIONAL
MORPHEMES CHANGE THE CATEGORY OF A WORD
OR CHANGE THE MEANING OF A WORD.
•  English has a limited number of inflectional
morphemes.
• 
English has many derivational endings/morphemes
DERIVATIONAL AFFIXES
• 
• 
There are many different derivational affixes.
(ment, ness, ize pre)
Each derivational affix may be attached to relatively
few stems.
•  A derivational affix derives a NEW PART OF SPEECH
EXAMPLES OF DERIVATIONAL
MORPHEMES
• 
Making verbs from other parts of speech
purepurify gloryglorify widewiden
(Note these are suffixes)
•  Making nouns from verbs
Enjoy Enjoyment
Activate Activation
Abbreviate Abbreviation