1 / 22

Morphology, Part 2

Morphology, Part 2. January 26, 2012. In Our Last Episode. Words and morphemes (meaningful “word parts”) Free and bound morphemes Simple and complex words Affixes and roots Word-formation rules Affixes attach to a root (or base) of a particular lexical category…

Download Presentation

Morphology, Part 2

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Morphology, Part 2 January 26, 2012

  2. In Our Last Episode • Words and morphemes (meaningful “word parts”) • Free and bound morphemes • Simple and complex words • Affixes and roots • Word-formation rules • Affixes attach to a root (or base) of a particular lexical category… • and create a new word.

  3. Layers of Words • Words that are formed through the addition of multiple affixes have a layered, or hierarchical structure. • One (ugly) way to represent this structure is through bracket notation: • [root] [construct] • [[affix] + [root]] [[re-] + [construct]] (=base) • [[base] + [affix]] [[[re-] + [construct]] + [-ion]] • WORD reconstruction

  4. Tree Structures • In this class, we’ll primarily stick with tree diagrams to represent word structure. • (because they look better and are easier to read) • re construct ion un desire able • Tree terminology: branches • nodes: where two branches meet • nodes represent constituents of the word

  5. Building the Perfect Beasts • To accurately capture all of the facts of word formation… • tree structures should represent the lexical categories of all constituents at each node in the tree. • Noun Adj • Verb Adj • Aff Verb Aff Aff Verb Aff • [re-] [construct] [-ion] [un-] [desire] [-able]

  6. Ambiguity • Some complex words can have more than one interpretation • Different derivations can result in different interpretations • Example: “unlockable” Note: [un-] can attach to both adjectives and verbs [-able] attaches to verbs and creatives adjectives

  7. Unlockable, part 1 • Adj • Adj • Aff Verb Aff • [un-] [lock] [-able] • = not able to be locked

  8. Unlockable, part 2 • Adj • Verb • Aff Verb Aff • [un-] [lock] [-able] • = able to be unlocked

  9. Inflections vs. Derivations • Linguists draw another distinction among affixes: • Inflectional affixes: • mark grammatical properties • (person, number, gender, tense, aspect) • don’t change other aspects of meaning • are required by rules of sentence structure • create a new “word form” • Derivational affixes: • change meaning • create a new word • (typically) have clear semantic content • may change the lexical category of the word

  10. Inflectional Affixes • There are precisely eight inflectional affixes in English: • -s 3rd person wait --> waits • -ing progressive wait --> waiting • -ed past tense wait --> waited • -en past participle eat --> eaten • -s plural card --> cards • -’s possessive dad --> dad’s • -er comparative tall --> taller • -est superlative weak --> weakest • All of these are suffixes.

  11. Inflectional Affixes • Other languages can have a lot more inflectional affixes. • Examples from French: parler “to speak” • 1st person, plural: parlons “We speak” • 2nd person, plural: parlez “You guys speak” • Past tense: • 1st person, singular: parlais “I spoke” • 1st person, plural: parlions “We spoke” • 2nd person, plural: parliez “You guys spoke” • Plus many, many more.

  12. Derivational Affixes • In contrast to inflectional affixes, derivational affixes: • Create new words when they’re attached to roots • Examples: • re- cycle --> recycle • de- code --> decode • -y fish --> fishy • -ize vandal --> vandalize • Also: English has far more derivational affixes than inflectional affixes.

  13. A Note on Word Forms • Morphologists use the term lexeme to refer to a group of related word forms. • wait, waits, waited, waiting, etc. • The canonical form of the lexeme is called the lemma. • = the “headword” in a dictionary. lemma word forms different lexeme • Inflectional affixes relate a lexeme to its various forms. • Derivational affixes relate one lexeme to another lexeme.

  14. The Class System • In English, there are two types of derivational affixes: 1. Class 1 (or Level 1) • Often cause phonological (sound) changes in the root • Also cause more profound semantic (meaning) changes to the root • Can combine with bound roots, too. • Ex: -ity, -y, -ion • For instance: • Electric  electricity; stupid  stupidity • democrat  democracy; nation

  15. The Class System • Class 2 (or Level 2) • Don’t cause phonological (sound) changes in root. • Less of a semantic (meaning) effect, too. • Ex: -ness, -less, -er, -ish • Normally, Class 1 affixes attach to the root before Class 2 affixes. • relational -ion (1), -al (1) • divisiveness -ive (1), -ness (2) • *fearlessity -less (2), -ity (1) • fearlessness -less (2), -ness (2)

  16. Productivity • Productivity = the extent to which a word-formation rule can be applied to new morphemes, to form new words • Class 2 affixes tend to be more productive than Class 1 affixes. • -ness vs. -ity • both attach to: adjectives • both form: nouns • both mean: the quality of the adjective • blindness stupidity • happiness validity • goodness complexity

  17. Productiveness • -ness is very productive, so it can expand its reach to other words: • stupidness, validness, complexness • The same is not true of -ity: • *blindity, *happity, *goodity • -ness is so productive, it can also be affixed to new words: • truthy + -ness  truthiness • chair + -ness  chairness • productive + -ness  productiveness

  18. Unproductivity • -able is another very productive morpheme: • make-fun-of-able • Other morphemes are not so lucky: • -th: warm + -th = warmth • wide + -th = width • deep + -th = depth • cool + -th = *coolth • -en: moist + -en = moisten • red + -en = redden • cute + -en = ?cuten • abstract + -en = *abstracten

  19. An Intermediate Case • -ify attaches to adjectives to form verbs • just + -ify = justify • pure + -ify = purify • quick + -ify = ?quickify • smart + -ify = ?smartify • An anecdotal case • busy + -ify = busify • ugly + -ify = uglify • -ify has limited productivity

  20. Blocking • Productivity can sometimes be limited by the existence of other words • intelligent + -ness = *intelligentness • “intelligence” gets in the way • it blocks intelligentness from existence • true + -ness = *trueness (truth) • inhabit + -er = *inhabiter (inhabitant) • guide + -er = *guider (guide) • In other cases, a new word gets created anyway: • pride + -ful = prideful (proud)

  21. Content and Function Words • One last distinction: there are both content and function words. • Content words = • have some semantic content (meaning) • nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs • ex: politics, baseball, socks, green, create • Function words = • specify grammatical relations • have little or no semantic content • prepositions, pronouns, conjunctions

  22. Content and Function Words • Content words are an “open class”-- • we can add new members anytime we want. • Function words are a “closed class”-- • it’s not easy (or possible?) to add new members. • When was the last time you heard a new pronoun? Or new preposition? • (thoughts on the quick write?) • Our minds also process function words differently from content words.

More Related