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Morphology

Morphology. A review. What is a morpheme? What is the difference between free and bound morphemes? What is a root morpheme? What is the difference between inflectional and derivational morphemes? . What are the building blocks in the formation of complex words?. Morphemes

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Morphology

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  1. Morphology A review

  2. What is a morpheme? • What is the difference between free and bound morphemes? • What is a root morpheme? • What is the difference between inflectional and derivational morphemes?

  3. What are the building blocks in the formation of complex words? • Morphemes • The most elemental unit of a word • Morphology • Study of the internal structure; rules of word formation

  4. Affixes • Prefixes • Prefixes are added to the beginning • Suffixes • Suffixes are added to the end • Form a word with 2 suffixes • Form a word with 1 Prefix and 2 Suffixes

  5. Mini exercise For each of the words below, determine the number of morphemes it has. Sister sister’s sisters happy blister unhappy the teacher carefully

  6. Free morphemes vs. bound morphemes • Free morphemes can be used alone • Bound morphemes must be attached to other morphemes • Free morpheme in a complex word: Deactivation de+act+iv+at+ion • Act: 1 a: the doing of a thing (Merriam Webster Dictionary)

  7. Free morphemes vs. bound morphemes • Quick exercise For each morpheme below, determine whether it’s free or bound. Pre pro ive y worth with un ion re duct ed able

  8. Lexical morphemes vs. grammatical morphemes • Lexical morpheme • Have a ‘real world’ meaning • Also called content morpheme • Grammatical morpheme • Change the form of a word but don’t have ‘real word’ meaning • Test: find a synonym for the morpheme • If you can find one, it’s a lexical morpheme • What is the difference between free &bound morphemes and lexical & grammatical morphemes?

  9. Root morphemes vs. Affix morphemes • What’s a root morpheme? Note: -roots tend to be free and lexical -affixes tend to be bound and grammatical

  10. Exceptions • Quick exercise • Analyze the word: “production” • How many morphemes does it have? • Which morpheme is the stem? Which ones are affixes? • Is the stem free and lexical? Conclusion: ‘duct’ is a bound root morpheme

  11. Root morphemes • Quick exercise • Identify the roots of the following words kingdom interplanetary dimensional margins paintball children

  12. Inflectional Affixes vs. Derivational Affixes • What are inflectional affixes? • Do not create new words when they attach to existing words • They change the form of that word to indicate grammatical meaning

  13. Inflectional Affixes vs. Derivational Affixes • Plural –s, -es(noun) • Possessive –’s, s’ (noun) • Comparative –er (adj.) • Superlative –est (adj.) • 3rd person singular –s (verb) • Past tense –ed (verb) • Past participle –ed, -en • Present participle -ing • Pim likes to eat peach-es • Pim’s grades are great • Pim is smart-er than Boss • Pim is the quick-est of all • Pim like-s to study • Pimstudi-ed hard for the quiz • Pim hasn’t fail-ed a test yet. • Pim has been study-ingfor 3 hours Inflectional morpheme Example

  14. Inflectional Affixes vs. Derivational Affixes • Derivational Affixes • Create new (or derive) new words in two ways • Some derivational morphemes change the content meaning but not grammatical meaning • Others don’t significantly change the meaning but the grammatical meaning. • Unlike inflectional affixes, derivational affixes can be both, prefixes or suffixes in English.

  15. Derivational affixes The number of derivational affixes in English is far greater than inflectional affixes

  16. Derivational affixes Quick exercise • Each of the words below contains two morphemes, a root and a derivational affix. Decide if the derivational affix changes the meaning or class of the root. retake hopeless undress tension disembark cheerful What is the general trend with regard to the behavior of derivational prefixes vs. suffixes? That is, how does each kind of affix derive new words?

  17. Derivational affixes Quick exercise • Each of the words below contains two morphemes, a root and a derivational affix. Decide if the derivational affix changes the meaning or class of the root. rewrite hopeless unclear creation unhappy helpful What is the general trend with regard to the behavior of derivational prefixes vs. suffixes? That is, how does each kind of affix derive new words?

  18. Overview of all discussed distinctions Morphemes bound free lexical -bound roots grammatical lexical inflectional -eight suffixes derivational prefixes ex:-un suffixes ex: -ness

  19. Word creation in English (Neologism) • Affixing • Affixing and derivation create new words in English • X number of affixes +Y number of words (stems) • Example: ‘un-’ • Functional shift • Words changing word class • Example: impact (noun and verb) Quick exercise: Transition reference proposition help hope

  20. Word creation in English (Neologism) • Coined words • Speakers continually create new words. Consider the word ‘dissing’ in the sentence: Are you dissing me? 1. What does dissing mean? 2. What part of speech does it belong to? (Defend your answer on a morphological basis)

  21. Word creation in English (Neologism) • Acronyms • Common acronyms that turned into words: • Laser, radar, scuba, MUIC • Where do they derive from? • Light Amplification (by) Stimulated Emission (of) Radiation • RAdioDetecting And Ranging

  22. Word creation in English (Neologism) • Borrowing • Speakers of English aggressively borrow from other languages • Kindergarten (German) • Croissant (French) • Sushi (Japanese) • Macho (???) • List 3 words in Thai that are borrowed from English?

  23. Word creation in English (Neologism) • Blending • Mixing words • Quick exercise: from what words are the following blends mixed? Motel Infomercial Edutainment Netiquette

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