328.24K
Категория: Английский языкАнглийский язык

Morphological structure of the english words

1.

2.

… words are coined because an acute need is
felt…
Randolph Quirk

3.

1. The notion of the morpheme
2. Semantic classification of morphemes
3. Structural classification of morphemes
4. Morphemic, structural, derivational types of
analysis

4.

Morpheme is one of the fundamental units of a
language, a minimum sign that is an
association of a given meaning with a given
f.orm (sound and graphic)
Ex. cloud-y

5.

A MORPHEME versus a PHONEME(unlike a
word a phoneme has no meaning of its own)
A MORPHEME versus a WORD (a mprpheme
is not autonomous)

6.

Allomorph or morpheme variant is a
representation of the given morpheme that
manifests alteration. Therefore, morphemes
may have different phonemic shapes.
Ex. Please, pleasure, pleasant
Prefix in has several positional variants:
-il before –l- (illogical),
-ir- before –r- (irresponsible),
-im- before –b-m-pEx. –S- in the pl of nouns –s, -es

7.

Root (=radical) is the lexical nucleus of a word.
Prefix is the derivational affix standing before
the stem and modifying its meaning
Suffix is the derivational affix following the
stem and forming a new derivatiму шт a
different part of speech (actor, washable,
sharpen) or in a different word class within the
same part of speech (brotherhood, piglet,
youngster)

8.

Inflexion (=ending= grammatical suffix=
inflectional suffix) is a functional affix. They
have a form-changing function (play, plays,
played, playing), they carry ONLY the
grammatical meaning whereas suffixes
perform the word-building function. (play,
player, playful, playfulness)

9.

Lexicalised grammatical affix is a grammatical
suffix (inflexion) which developed into a
derivational suffix.
Ex. Customs
Colours

10.

Free morphemes
Bound morphemes
Semi-bound morphemes

11.

Free m. is a m. which coincides with a word-
form of an independently functioning word.
Can be found only among roots.
Bound m. is a m. which does not coincide with
a separate word form:
All affixes (ex. prefix anti-, suffix –ee)
Inflexions (ex. –ing in going)
Some root- morphemes (ex. docu- in document,
horr- in horror, busi- in business)

12.

Is a morpheme which stands midway between
a root and an affix. Can function as an
independent full-meaning word and at the
same time as an affix (a prefix or a suffix)
Ex. Speak ill of smb – ill-fed, ill-dressed, illbred
Ex. to be proof against water -?

13.

14.

Is a part of a word which remains when a
derivational or a functional affix is striped from
the word. Expresses the lexical and the part-ofspeech meanings.
Is a part of a word that remains unchanged
throughout its paradigm.
Ex. Employ- in employer,
Hearty-heartier- the heartiest (the stem is
hearty-)

15.

A set of words that all share a common root.

16.

17.

Stage 1. Divide the word into 2 constituent parts
(un-achievable)
Stage 2. Find a further indivisible morpheme (un-)
by correlating it with other words (unfair,
unforgettable, etc)
Stage 3. Divide the word into 2 constituent parts
again (achiev-able)
Stage 4. Find a further indivisible morpheme (able) by correlating it with other words
Stage 5. Find a further indivisible morpheme
(achiev-)
Stage 6. Conclusion.

18.

States the number and the types of morphemes
that make up a word. Does not reveal the
hierarchy of the morphemes (ex. uncheerful
>>cheer+ un+ ful.

19.

20.

21.

That was a pleasure to
interact with you!
English     Русский Правила