Morphology
Martos Alfitri PBI V D
MORPHOLOGY
MARTOS ALFITRI PBI V D 10714000764
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Morphology
Martos Alfitri PBI V D Morphology
Morphology is the study of the construction of words words out of morphemes
Morpheme
The morpheme is the smallest meaningful unit of language. (lexical and grammatical meaning) A morpheme must have a meaning, and it i s the smallest unit of meaning (the smallest sound-meaning union which cannot be further analyzed into smaller units). The word lady can be divided into two syllables (la.dy), but it consists of just one morpheme, because a syllable has nothing to do with meaning. The word un forgettable can be divided three morphemes (dis+agree+able). The word books contains only one syllable, but it consists of two morphemes (book+s) (Notice: the morpheme – s has a grammatical meaning [Plural])
The internal structure of words Words can have an internal structure, i.e. they are decomposable into smaller meaningful (lexical or grammatical) parts. These smallest meaningful units we call morphemes.
read+er
re+read
en+able
dark+en
Mary+’s
print+ed
c a t+ s
go+es
Classification of Morphemes 1. Accor Accordin ding g to their their pos positi ition on in the the word: word:
read
re+read
read+ing
rereading
root
prefix + root
root + suffix
prefix + root + suffix
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Morphology
Martos Alfitri PBI V D
2. Types ypes of affi affixe xes: s: •
Derivational
Derivational affixes (create new meaning) make new words by adding concrete meanings to old words:
-er, -ess -hood, -ive, -ness, re-, un- etc Examples of Derivational Affixes Affixes
Pre Prefix
Gramm rammat atic ica al ca categor egory y of of Grammatical category of base
inunundisdisre exen-
Adj Adj V V Adj V N N
Sufffix Su
output
Adj Adj V V Adj V N V
inaccurate unkind untie dis-like dishonest rewrite ex-wife encourage
Gra Gr amma mmatica ical categ tegory ory of Grammatical category of base
-hood -ship -f y -ic -less -ful - al -e r
N N N N N N V V
:
V - Adj:
print
V-V
:
(to) print
child-hood leader-ship beauti-fy poet-ic power-less care-ful refus-al read-er
printer printable
print
re-print
N-V
:
flea
de-flea
N – Ad
:
milk
milky
N-N
:
mother
Example
output
N N V Adj Adj Adj N N
V-N
Example
motherhood
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Morphology
Martos Alfitri PBI V D
Adj - N
:
happy
happiness
Adj - V
:
thick
thicken
Adj - Adj
:
happy
unhappy
Derivation typically adds a new lexical meaning component:
(7) (7)
prin printa tab ble: le: ‘su ‘such ch that that can can be be pri print nted ed’’
motherhood: ‘property of being a mother’ thicken: ‘become or cause to become thicker’
Derivation is recursive (feeds into itself):
(8)
in-de-cipher-abil-ity
Inflection (inflectional morphology) Creates word forms of a lexeme
(9)
CAT: cat (Singu (Singular) lar) cats (Plural) (Plural)
(10)
a.
SING: sing
Base form
sing singss
3sg 3sg Pre Prese sent nt Tense ense
singingPresent Participle
b.
sang
Past Tense
sung sung
Past Past Partici Participle ple (Perfec (Perfect/Pa t/Passi ssive ve Particip Participle) le)
WALK: walk
Base form
walk walkss 3sg 3sg Pres Presen entt Ten Tense se walking
Present Participle
walkedPast Tense walkedPast Participle (Perfect/Passive Participle)
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Morphology
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Martos Alfitri PBI V D
a.
COLD: cold
Positive
cold colder er Comp Compar arati ative ve coldest coldest Superlative Superlative
b.
GOOD: good
Positive
bet bette terr Comp Compar arat ativ ivee best
Superlative
Morphological operations Morphological operation =def ‘concrete change made to a word form in order to signal a derivational or inflectional process’
Other operations in English: Vowel change: man ~ men sing ~ sang ~ sung
Sometimes this accompanies affixations: break ~ broke ~ broken (= broke + en) write ( ~ wrote) ~ written
Consonant change: house [haus] ~ (to) house [houz] knife [naif] ~ knives [naivz]
Stress shift: (a) (a) có cóntrast ast ~ (to) co contrást
N ~V
(Languages with tones may use tone alternations to realize grammatical processes)
Conversion: word of one class treated as belonging to a different class without any overt morphological operation: N
V: paper ~ to paper (the wall) skin ~ to skin a rabbit
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Morphology
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head ~ to head hea d a department, an inquiry, inquiry, a phrase police ~ to police a town, a regulation V
N:walk ~ go for a walk fall ~ take a fall sleep ~ get a good night’s sleep
Also phrasal verbs: take off ~ a smooth take off put down ~ a cruel put down run through ~ a quick run through (one’s lecture) A
N:the good, the bad and the ugly
N
A:orange (balloon), primrose (wallpaper)
A
V wet (the paper), paper), dry (the dishes) dishes)
Types Types of inflectional infle ctional processes All English prefixes and most suffixes are derivational.
•
Inflectional
Affix Affixes es can can be divi divide ded d into into infl inflect ectio iona nall morp morphe heme mess and and deri deriva vatio tiona nall morphemes. This reflects two major morphological (word building) processes:
Inflectional Morphemes
Inflectional morphemes do not change grammatical category of the base to which
they are attached. They do not change the meaning of the base. They only carry relevant relevant grammatical grammatical information, information, e.g. plural. plural. Thus, Thus,
book
and
books
are both nouns
referring to the same kind of entity.
The number of inflectional affixes is small and fixed. NO new ones have been added
since 1500.
Suffix
Stem
Function
Example
-s
N
Plural
book-s
-s
V
3rd singular
sleep-s
V
present tense past tense
walk-ed
-ed
Morphology
Martos Alfitri PBI V D
-ing
V
Progressive
walk-ing
-e r
Adj
Comparative
tall-er
-est
Adj
Superlative
tall-est
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Inflectional affixes make different grammatical grammatical forms of the same word. word. English has only 8 productive inflections:
3 for verbs: -ed, -s, -ing
work+ed, work+s, work+ing
3 for nouns: -s, -'s -'s
boys, boy's, boys'
2 for adjectives: -er, -est
smart+er, smart+est
There are several unproductive inflections too, like the plural - en in oxen, and the participial -en in given . stem + ending (inflectional suffix) again’’ reprints ‘ Present Tense RE[PRINT]] = ‘print again’’
prefix root
re
print
suffix
s
3. Classification according to whether morpheme = word
FREE most roots in English but: adept, inept (BOUND ROOT)
BOUND most prefixes and suffixes (Derivational and inflectional) ism (free suffix) ex, pro, con (free prefixes)
4. Classifying words according to morpheme structure structure
•
Simple words is a single morpheme: house, I, the, off, salamander
Morphology
Martos Alfitri PBI V D
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Complex words words is root + at least 1 affix: worker, reread, retelling
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anti + dis + establish +ment + ari + an +ism Compound words can be distinguished into three forms; they are solid, hyphenated and open No. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.
SOLID Motorway Handbook Hardware Timewarm Outside Feedback brainwork
HYPENATED Double-decker Box-office Hard-cover Snow-white In-law Check-in Frog-eating-bird
OPEN Deep freeze Bank account Credit card etc.
Word-formation processes
MAJOR
•
Affixation: process of forming words by b y adding affxes to morphemes.
{ V + -able ! A: predict+ -able { V + -er ! N: sing+er { un + A ! A: un-productive { A + en ! V: deep+ -en, thick+ -en
•
Compounding: word formation process by which new words are formed by
combining two or more independent words. { A + A ! A: bittersweet { N + N ! N: rainbow { V + V ! V: sleepwalk { P + P ! P: without { V + N ! N: pickpocket { N + V ! V: spoonfeed { P + V ! V: overdo
Morphology
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Martos Alfitri PBI V D
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Reduplication: process of forming new words either by doubling an entire
word (total reduplictation) or part of a word (partial reduplication). { English: humpty-dumpty, higgledy-piggeldy
(partial reduplication) { Creole: blak \black", blakblak \very black" (total
reduplication)
•
Morpheme-internal Morpheme-internal Changes: a type of word formation process wherein a
word changes internally to indicate grammatical information. { ablaut: sing, sang, sung; swim, swam, swum { other changes: man, men; mouse, mice, goose,
Geese
•
Suppletion: a relationship between forms of a word wherein on form cannot
be phonologically or morphologically or morphologically derived from the other, this process is rare. { am - was; go -went { good - better; bad - worse
MINOR
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ACRONYMS:
extreme form of reduction; -are formed from the initial letters of a set of other words 2 kind of them: “alphabetisisms”->CD, DNA-pronunciation consist of the set of letters; -second are pronounced as a single word-> NATO, NATO, NASA, UNESCO, PIN some acronyms lose their capitals to become everyday terms -> laser
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BACKFORMATION:
a word of one type(usu a noun) is reduced to form another word of a different type(usu type(usu a verb); -worker->work, -worker->work, donation->d donation->donate… onate…hypo hypocorism corisms-a s-a longer longer word is
Morphology
Martos Alfitri 10 PBI V D
reduc reduced ed to a sing single le sylla syllabl ble, e, then then –y or –ie –ie is adde added d to the the end: end: movi movie, e, telly telly->television Synchronic perspective on language-together; at the same point of time Diachronic perspective on language-not together; in different points of time; showing changes, how the language evolve in time.
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BLENDING:
taking only the beginning of one word and joining it to the end of the other word; clipped clipped and then then compou compounde nded d word word eg. smog smog (smoke (smoke +fog), +fog), motel, motel, bit, bit, brunch brunch,, telecast, Chunnel.
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BORROWING:
very common word –formation process; it’s social phenomenon means, the taking over of words from other languages; -it takes place when a speaker of one culture come come to cont contac actt with with anot another her one; one; -the -the borro borrowi wing ng will will be taken taken from from the the most most influential culture Loan-words – words adapted from other languages Loan-translation (calque) – it’s a direct translation of the elements of a word into the borrowing language. There’s always change in phonological structure.
•
CLIPPING:
clip=to cut; -making words shorter, reducing them; a word of more then one syllable is reduced to a shorter form; -esp in casual speech; -gas, bus, piano, bra
•
COINAGE:
The invention of totally new terms Proper names or trade names for one company’s product become general terms for any version of that product.(eg. kleenex, Guy Fox->guy(any human being); -meaning of the words is broaden and broaden.
•
CONVERSION:
Morphology
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a change in the function of a word(eg. when the noun comes to be used as a verb without any reduction)other names are: “category change” I “functional shift”; very productive in English, do not exist in Polish eg. cut,paper, butter, bottle, vecation, spy. spy. some converted forms shift in meaning when they change the category. category.
•
PSEUDO ACRONYM
Reduce sentence into some letters e.g. I C Q : I Seek You, You, C U : See you, SQR : secure, etc.
•
ONOMOTOPEOIA
Words created from sound e.g. Meauw > Cat, etc.