MORPHOLOGICAL STRUCTURE OF ENGLISH WORDS. Morphemes and Words WORD particular meaning particular...

30
MORPHOLOGICAL STRUCTURE OF ENGLISH WORDS

Transcript of MORPHOLOGICAL STRUCTURE OF ENGLISH WORDS. Morphemes and Words WORD particular meaning particular...

MORPHOLOGICAL STRUCTURE OF ENGLISH WORDS

Morphemes and Words

WORD particular meaning particular sound form capable of a particular

grammatical employment

able to form a sentence autonomous

MORPHEME particular meaning particular sound form not autonomous constituent part of a

word not divisible into smaller

meaningful units

MORPHEME

is the smallest meaningful language unitis the smallest meaningful language unit

Words are subdivided into two classes:

Non-segmentable (to) teach (to) bear drive

Segmentable teacher, teaching unbearable driver

ALLOMORPHS

Variants of one and the same morpheme

e.g. poor – povertysouth – southernwide - width

ALLOMORPH

is a positional variant of a morpheme occurring in a specific environment characterized by complimentary distribution

Complementary distribution

(allomorphs) Two linguistic variants

cannot appear in the same environment

E.g. –ion/-sion/-tion/-ation

im-/il-/ir-/in- (impossible/ illegal/irresistible/indirect

long - lengh

Contrastive distribution

(morphemes) Two language units can

appear in the same environment

They signal different meanings

E.g. –able (measurable)-ed (measured)

FREE morphemes Coincide with a word-

form May stand alone without

changing its meaning Can be only roots E.g. sport- in sportive

BOUND morphemes

Do not coincide with separate word-forms

Occur only as a constituent part of words

Are mostly derivational morphemes

E.g. –ive in sportive;eleg- and -ant in elegant

morphemes

roots affixes

DerivationalFunctional (endings or

outer formatives

prefixes

suffixes

infixes

A ROOT MORPHEME

is a lexical center of a word has an individual lexical meaning

common to a set of semantically related words (word-family)

e.g. to write, writer, writing

A ROOT MORPHEME

does not possess a part-of-speech meaning

e.g. cold water, to water flowers is often homonymous to words

e.g. find, bear, land, man is an ultimate constituent at a

morphological level of analysis

A STEMis what remains of a word when a

derivational or functional affix is removed from the word

e.g. hearty, heart - hearts

A STEM

expresses lexical and part-of-speech meaning

e.g. develop- (verbal stem) + -ment = development (noun stem)

A STEM

remains unchanged throughout a word’s paradigm

e.g. hearty – heartier – (the) heartiest;

to ask – asks – asked – asked- asking;

singer – singer’s – singers – singers’

FUNCTIONAL AFFIXES

Convey grammatical meaning

e.g. –s –the plural of nouns – boys

-er – comparative degree of adjectives - smaller

FUNCTIONAL AFFIXES

build different forms of one and the same word (a word-form)

e.g. boy- boys, boy’s – boys’;

take – takes;

hearty – heartier – (the) heartiest

DERIVATIONAL AFFIXES

build new words

e.g. to teach - a teacherhave a part-of-speech meaning

e.g. to change – changeable

to organize – organizationare dependent on the root they

modify (bound)

A SUFFIX

a derivational morphemefollows the stem or rootforms a new derived word in a

different part of speech or a different word class

e.g. heart – hearty, heartless, hearten

A PREFIX

a derivational morpheme

stands before the root or stem

modifies the word meaning

e.g. hearten – dishearten

AN INFIX

is placed within the word

e.g. stand

to-us-ward (toward us)

A SEMI-AFFIX

occupies an intermediate position between roots and affixes

is a root morpheme which functions as a derivational affix

e.g. well-done, well-fed

fireman, spaceman

ill-dressed, ill-housed

lady-like, business-like

CLASSIFICATION OF AFFIXES

Native & borrowed (e.g. sleepe.g. sleepyy – act – actoror)

Productive & non-productive ((e.g. e.g. disdisappoint appoint – child– childhoodhood))

Frequent & non-frequent (e.g. harme.g. harmful)ful)

Noun-forming, adjective-forming, etc. (e.g. e.g. mobstmobsterer, , aawake, wake, ununtie, etc.)tie, etc.)

CLASSIFICATION OF AFFIXES

transpositive (change the lexico-grammatical meaning of the word) & non-transpositive (do not change the lexico-grammatical meaning)

e.g. non- + stop (v.) = non-stop (adj.)

employ (v.) + -ee = employee (n.)

CLASSIFICATION OF AFFIXES

polysemantic (possess several connected meanings) & monosemantic (possess only one meaning)e.g. un- 1) to reverse action: untie

2) to deprive of: unhive, unearth

-less, without: colorless

ANALYSIS INTO IMMEDIATE CONSTITUENTS (анализ по непосредственным составляющим)

Ungentlemanly1. Un- + gentlemanly (unnatural,

untimely)

2. Un- +gentleman- + -ly (womanly, masterly)

3. Un- + gentle- + -man- + -ly (noble)

4. Un- + -gent- + -le- + -man- + -ly

STRUCTURAL TYPES OF WORDS

According to the number of morphemes words may be

monomorphic polymorphic

affixed (derived) compound compound-affixedsimple

MONOMORPHIC WORDS

Simple words (root words)Simple words (root words) = one root morpheme + (functional affix)

e.g. seldom, dog, asked, chairs

POLYMORPHIC WORDS

Affixed (derived) wordsAffixed (derived) words oror derivativesderivatives = one root morpheme + one or more derivational affixes + (functional affix)

e.g. acceptable, outdo, dislikes, discouragement

POLYMORPHIC WORDS

Compound wordsCompound words = two or more root morphemes + (functional affix)

e.g. baby-moons, eye-ball, stick-and-carrot (policy)

POLYMORPHIC WORDS

Compound-affixed words Compound-affixed words (derivational compounds (derivational compounds oror compound derivatives)compound derivatives) = two or more root morphemes + one or more derivational affixes + (functional affix)

e.g. job-hopper, pen-holder, light-mindedness