Two
Morphemes
Morphemes are the minimal units of words that have a meaning and
cannot be subdivided further. There are two main types: free and bound. Free
morphemes can occur alone and bound morphemes must occur with another morpheme.
An example of a free morpheme is "bad", and an example of a bound
morpheme is "ly." It is bound because although it has meaning, it
cannot stand alone. It must be attached to another morpheme to produce a word.
Free morpheme: bad
Bound morpheme: ly
Word: badly
Bound morpheme: ly
Word: badly
Lexical and function words
When we talk
about words, there are two groups: lexical (or content) and function
(or grammatical) words. Lexical words are called open class words and include
nouns, verbs, adjectives and adverbs. New words can regularly be added to this
group. Function words, or closed class words, are conjunctions, prepositions,
articles and pronouns; and new words cannot be (or are very rarely) added to
this class.
Affixes, suffixes, suffixes, circumfixes
are often
the bound morpheme. This group includes prefixes, suffixes, infixes, and
circumfixes. Prefixes are added to the beginning of another morpheme,
suffixes are added to the end, infixes are inserted into other morphemes, and
circumfixes are attached to another morpheme at the beginning and end. Following
are examples of each of these:
Prefix: re- added to do
produces redo
Suffix: -or added to edit produces editor
Infix: -um- added to fikas (strong) produces fumikas (to be strong) in Bontoc
Circumfix: ge- and -t to lieb (love) produces geliebt (loved) in German
Suffix: -or added to edit produces editor
Infix: -um- added to fikas (strong) produces fumikas (to be strong) in Bontoc
Circumfix: ge- and -t to lieb (love) produces geliebt (loved) in German
Derivational and inflectional
There are
two categories of affixes: derivational and inflectional. The main
difference between the two is that derivational affixes are added to morphemes
to form new words that may or may not be the same part of speech and
inflectional affixes are added to the end of an existing word for purely
grammatical reasons. In English there are only eight total inflectional
affixes:
-s
|
3rd
person singular present
|
she
waits
|
-ed
|
past
tense
|
she
waited
|
-ing
|
progressive
|
she's
eating
|
-en
|
past
participle
|
she has
eaten
|
-s
|
plural
|
three
apples
|
-'s
|
possessive
|
Lori's
son
|
-er
|
comparative
|
you are
taller
|
-est
|
superlative
|
you are
the shortest
|
The other type of bound morphemes
are called bound roots. These are morphemes (and not affixes) that must be
attached to another morpheme and do not have a meaning of their own. Some
examples are ceive in perceive and mit in submit.
English Morphemes
A.
Free
1.
Open Class
2.
Closed Class
B.
Bound
1.
Affix
a.
Derivational
b.
Inflectional
2.
Root
Compounds, acronyms, back-formations, abbreviations, clippings, eponyms, blending
There are
six ways to form new words. Compounds are a combination of words, acronyms
are derived from the initials of words, back-formations are created from
removing what is mistakenly considered to be an affix, abbreviations or
clippings are shortening longer words, eponyms are created from
proper nouns (names), and blending is combining parts of words into one.
Compound: doghouse
Acronym: NBA (National Basketball Association) or scuba (self-contained underwater breathing apparatus)
Back-formation: edit from editor
Abbreviation: phone from telephone
Eponym: sandwich from Earl of Sandwich
Blending: smog from smoke and fog
Acronym: NBA (National Basketball Association) or scuba (self-contained underwater breathing apparatus)
Back-formation: edit from editor
Abbreviation: phone from telephone
Eponym: sandwich from Earl of Sandwich
Blending: smog from smoke and fog
Grammar is
learned unconsciously at a young age. Ask any five year old, and he will tell
you that "I eat" and "you eat," but his "dog
eats." But a human's syntactical knowledge goes farther than what is
grammatical and what is not. It also accounts for ambiguity, in which a
sentence could have two meanings, and enables us to determine grammatical
relationships such as subject and direct object. Although we may not
consciously be able to define the terms, we unconsciously know how to use them
in sentences.
Syntax, of
course, depends on lexical categories (parts of speech.) You probably learned
that there are 8 main parts of speech in grammar school. Linguistics takes a
different approach to these categories and separates words into morphological
and syntactic groups. Linguistics analyzes words according to their affixes and
the words that follow or precede them. Hopefully, the following definitions of
the parts of speech will make more sense and be of more use than the old
definitions of grammar school books.
Open Class Words
Nouns
|
_____ + plural endings
"dogs" |
Det. Adj. _____ (this is called a
Noun Phrase)
"the big dog" |
Verbs
|
____ + tense endings
"speaks" |
Aux. ____ (this is called a Verb
Phrase)
"have spoken" |
Adjectives
|
____ + er / est
"small" |
Det. ____ Noun
"the smaller child" |
Adverbs
|
Adj. + ly
"quickly" |
____ Adj. or Verb or Adv.
"quickly ran" |
Closed Class Words
Determiners
|
a, an, the, this, that, these,
those, pronouns, quantities |
____ Adj. Noun
"this blue book" |
Auxiliary Verbs
|
forms of be, have, may,
can, shall |
NP ____ VP
"the girl is swimming" |
Prepositions
|
at, in, on, under, over, of
|
____ NP (this is called a
Prepositional Phrase)
"in the room" |
Conjunctions
|
and, but, or
|
N or V or Adj. ____ N or V or Adj.
"apples and oranges" |
Subcategorization
Subcategorization defines the restrictions on which syntactic categories
(parts of speech) can or cannot occur within a lexical item. These additional
specifications of words are included in our mental lexicon. Verbs are the most
common categories that are subcategorized. Verbs can either be transitive or
intransitive. Transitive verbs take a direct object, while intransitive
verbs take an indirect object (usually they need a preposition before the
noun).
Transitive verb: to eat
|
I ate an apple. (direct object)
|
||
Intransitive: to sleep
|
I was sleeping in the bed.
(indirect object)
|
Individual
nouns can also be subcategorized. For example, the noun idea can be
followed by a Prepositional Phrase or that and a sentence. But the noun compassion
can only be followed by a Prepositional Phrase and not a sentence.
(Ungrammatical sentences are marked with asterisks.)
the idea of stricter laws
|
his compassion for the animals
|
||
the idea that stricter laws are
necessary
|
*his compassion that the animals
are hurt
|
Phrase structure rules
Phrase structure rules describe how phrases are formed and in what order. These
rules define the following:
Noun Phrase (NP)
|
(Det.) (Adj.) Noun (PP)
|
||
Verb Phrase (VP)
|
Verb (NP) (PP)
|
||
Prepositional Phrase (PP)
|
Prep. NP
|
||
Sentence (S)
|
NP VP
|
The
parentheses indicate the categories are optional. Verbs don't always have to be
followed by prepositional phrases and nouns don't always have to be preceded by
adjectives.
Passive Sentences
The
difference between the two sentences "Mary hired Bill" and "Bill
was hired by Mary" is that the first is active and the second is passive.
In order to change an active sentence into a passive one, the object of the
active must become the subject of the passive. The verb in the passive sentence
becomes a form of "be" plus the participle form of the main verb. And
the subject of the active becomes the object of the passive preceded by the
word "by."
Active
|
Passive
|
||
Mary hired Bill.
|
Bill was hired by Mary.
|
||
Subject + Verb + Object
|
Object + "be" + Verb +
by + Subject
|
Source: http://www.ielanguages.com/linguist.html
Key terms
Key Terms
lexical function
prefixes suffixes
infixes circumfixes.
derivational
inflectional.
compounds acronyms
back-formations abbreviations
clippings, eponyms
blending
Questions
1. What are morphemes?
2. What are the two main
types of morphemes? Give examples of both.
3. When we talk about
words, there are two groups: lexical (or
content) and function (or
grammatical) words. What are they?
4. Affixes are
often the bound morpheme. This group includes prefixes, suffixes, infixes, and circumfixes. Give examples.
5. What are the two categories of affixes: derivational and inflectional?
6. What are bound roots? Give examples.
7. How many ways of forming new words
in English? Give examples.
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Donation/Subsidy
If you want to donate some money to support this blog to improve and to provide you better, please transfer
to Hot Saut Halomoan, BCA A/C No. 0657065483, BRI A/C No. 092801002485537. My cellphone no
is 08128573122, email: hsh_mnrg@yahoo.com.

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