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Assalamualaikum wr . w b GROUP 1 (Class A) The Six Senses

Assalamualaikum wr . w b GROUP 1 (Class A) The Six Senses. The members : Adi Khoerul Anwar Denny Irdantie Tikasari Whildanah Sekar Sarasati Reny Setiyo Anggraeni Angga Alfian Saputra PBI Irfan Dwi Yulianto. MORPHOLOGY On Selecta on Grammar 2

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Assalamualaikum wr . w b GROUP 1 (Class A) The Six Senses

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  1. Assalamualaikumwr. wbGROUP 1 (Class A)The Six Senses The members : AdiKhoerul Anwar Denny IrdantieTikasari WhildanahSekarSarasati RenySetiyoAnggraeni AnggaAlfianSaputra PBI IrfanDwiYulianto

  2. MORPHOLOGY • On • Selecta on Grammar 2 • Lecturer : JatiSuryanto, S.pd., Dipl. TESOL

  3. Morphology • Morphology is the branch of linguistics that studies the structure of words.

  4. Morphology • In English and many other languages, many words can be broken down into parts. For example: • unhappiness un-happi-ness • horses horse-s • walking walk-ing

  5. Morphology The Details : • un- carries a negative meaning • ness- expresses a state or quality • s- expresses plurality • ing- conveys a sense of duration

  6. Morphology • A word like “yes”, however, has no internal grammatical structure. We can analyze the sounds, but none of them has any meaning in isolation.

  7. Morphology • The smallest unit which has a meaning or grammatical function that words can be broken down into are known as morphemes. • So to be clear: “un” is a morpheme. • “yes” is also a morpheme, but also happens to be a word.

  8. Morphology There are several important distinctions that must be made in morpheme : (1) – Free vs. Bound morphemes • Free morphemes are morphemes which can stand alone. We have already seen the example of “yes”.

  9. Morphology • Bound morphemes: never exist as words themselves, but are always attached to some other morpheme. We have already seen the example of “un”.

  10. Morphology • When we identify the number and types of morphemes that a given word consists of, we are looking at what is referred to as the structure of a word. • Every word has at least one free morpheme, which is referred to as the root,stem, or base.

  11. Morphology • We can further divide bound morphemes into three categories: • prefixun-happy • suffixhappi-ness • infixabso-blooming-lutely • The general term for all three is affix.

  12. Morphology (2) –Derivational vs. Inflectional morphemes • Derivational morphemes create or derive new words by changing the meaning or by changing the word classof the word.  • For example: • happy → unhappy • Both words are adjectives, but the meaning changes.

  13. Morphology • quick → quickness • The affix changes both meaning and word class - adjective to a noun. • In English: Derivational morphemes can be either prefixes or suffixes.

  14. Morphology • Inflectional morphemes don’t alter words the meaning or word class of a word; instead they only refine and give extra grammatical information about the word’s already existing meaning. • For example: • Cat → cats • walk → walking

  15. Morphology • In English: Inflectional morphemes are all suffixes (by chance, since in other languages this is not true). • There are only 8 inflectional morphemes in English:

  16. Morphology • -s 3rd person sg. present • “He waits” • -ed past tense • “He waited” • -ing progressive • “He is waiting”

  17. Morphology • -en past participle • “I had eaten” • -s plural • “Both chairs are broken” • -’s possessive • “The chair’s leg is broken”

  18. Morphology • -er comparative • “He was faster” • -est superlative • “He was the fastest”

  19. Morphology • Inflectionalmorphemes are required by syntax. (that is, they indicate syntactic or semantic relations betweendifferent words in a sentence). For example: • Nimloves bananas. but  • They love bananas.

  20. Morphology • Derivational morphemes are different with inflectional morphemes. In the syntax does not require the presence of derivational morphemes; however, it indicates semantic relations within a word (that is, they change the meaning of the word). For example: • kind → unkind • He is unkind • They are unkind

  21. Morphology • A morpheme is not equal to a syllable: • "coats"  has 1 syllable, but 2 morphemes. • "syllable" has 2 syllables, but only 1 morpheme

  22. Morphology Types of Word-Formation Processes • A first word-formation process is known as affixation, which is forming new words by the combination of bound affixes and free morphemes.

  23. Morphology There are three types of affixation: • Prefixation: where an affix is placed before the base of the word • suffixation: where an affix is placed after the base of the word • infixation: where an affix is placed within a stem (word + inflection) (abso-blooming-lutely)

  24. Morphology • While English uses primarily prefixation and suffixation, many other languages use infixes. • These are Infixes in English : • Hallelujah >>Hallebloodylujah • Fantastic >> Fan-flaming-tastic( Engagement) • Absolutely >>Absobloominlutely(of course )

  25. Morphology • In Tagolog, a language of the Philippines, for example, the infix ‘um’ is used for infinitive forms of verbs (to _______) EXAMPLE : • sulat ‘write’ sumulat ‘to write’ • bili ‘buy’ bumili ‘to buy’ • kuha ‘take’ kumuha ‘to take’

  26. Morphology • A second word-formation process is known as Compounding, which is forming new words not from bound affixes but from two or more independent words: the words can be free morphemes, words derived by affixation, or even words formed by compounds themselves. • e.g. girlfriend air-conditioner blackbird looking-glass textbook watchmaker

  27. Morphology • Compound words have different stress, as in the following examples: • The wool sweater gave the man a red neck. • The redneck in the bar got drunk and started yelling

  28. Morphology • In compounds, the primary stress is on the first word only, while individual words in phrases have independent primary stress. • blackbird black bird • makeup make up

  29. Morphology • A third word-formation process is known as Reduplication, which is forming new words either by doubling an entire free morpheme (total reduplication) or part of a morpheme (partial reduplication). >> English doesn’t use this, but other languages make much more extensive use of reduplication.

  30. Morphology • In Indonesian, for example, total reduplication is used to form plurals: • rumah ‘house’ • Rumah-rumah ‘houses’ • ibu ‘mother’ • Ibu-ibu ‘mothers’ • lalat ‘fly’ • Lalat-lalat ‘flies’

  31. Morphology • A fourth type of word-formation process is known as Blending, where two words merge into each other, such as: • brunch from breakfast and lunch • smog from smoke and fog 

  32. Thanks for your attention Assalamualaikumwr. Wb Hope this material is useful for us

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