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Week3- Morphology. Dr. Monira I. Al- Mohizea. What is this?. A ‘Horse’ is…. In Arabic it is called ‘ حصان ’. In French it is called ‘cheval’. in English it is called ‘horse’. None of these is a better or worse way symbolizing the concept 'horse'.
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Week3- Morphology Dr. Monira I. Al-Mohizea
A ‘Horse’ is…. • In Arabic it is called ‘حصان’. • In French it is called ‘cheval’. • in English it is called ‘horse’. • None of these is a better or worse way symbolizing the concept 'horse'. • There is noprinciple that can enable us to determine which linguistic sign will have a particular meaning. The meanings of all morphemes and many words if have to be listed in our mental lexicon??, and memorized.
What is a ‘Lexicon’ • Formally, in linguistics, a lexicon is a language's inventory of lexemes. • The vocabulary of a person, language, or branch of knowledge (mental).
Exception! • In the case of onomatopoeia, where the word imitates some aspect of the meaning of the concept it represents (i.e. the formation of a word from a sound associated with what is named, e.g. cuckoo, sizzle). The linguistic sign is iconic and not arbitrary. • But the iconicity is closely linked to convention, and arbitrariness. • E.g. the sound imitative of a dog's bark is woof in English, hut, in Romanian ham ham, in Russian gafgaf, in Estonian. • The differences do not reflect any dialectal differences among canine (dogs) populations.
Classifications of morphemes • Morphemes are classified as free or bound morphemes. • a freemorpheme can occur in isolation (as a word on its own). E.g.dog, write, deserve and child. • a bound morpheme cannot occur in isolation, E.g. , the forms -ish, tin-, -ed, -1y, re-, -ing • Any form that is used to represent a morpheme is called a “morph’’. E.g. the word child-ishhas twomorphs.
Allomorphs • Morphemes are represented by more than one formin different contexts. These variants are called allomorphs. • Allomorphs are morphemeshaving the same function but different form. Unlike synonyms they usually cannot be replaced one by the other. • Allomorphs are distinct with regard to form, but they have the same grammatical or semantic function. • E.g. the indefinite article in English has two allomorphs: • ais used if the next word starts with a consonant, e.g., a leg, a mother, a tomato. • anis used if the next word starts with a vowel, e.g., an ear, an egg, etc. They differ in pronunciation but are semantically identical.
Word Structure (affix, prefix, suffix) • Starting off with the base‘write’, we can add –ing = writing • -re +writing (base) + rewriting, etc. • A baseis a unit to which elements can be added in word-formation processes. • Affix: is a bound morpheme (suffix/prefix) that must be attached to a base. i.e. a morpheme that is not a root?; it is always bound. • a prefix precedes the base (e.g. prewash) • if it follows the base it is called a suffix(e.g. writer)
Infix & Circumfix • Infix: common in Austronesian and Austroasiatic languages (e.g. Tagalog, Khmer) In Tagalog: basa = ‘read’=> b·um·asa ‘read-past’ very rare in English: • E.g. ‘abso·bloody·lutely’ • Circumfix: morphemes having two parts that are placed around a root. In Dutch: Berg = ’mountain’ => ge·berg·te‘mountains’.
The base vs. the root • The base is also referred to as a root. • But, the root is the rump ‘remainder’ of a word that remains when all the affixes have been stripped away (i.e. it is a nucleusof the word that affixes attach too). • A base doesn't have to be a bare root. In many cases the base contains a root and one or more affixes; (e.g. rewrite) • We can form a compound word by combining two bases (words in their own right) • E.g. Ear+ witness = earwitness
What is a stem? • In forming a word, a lexical base to which inflectional morphemes are attached (e.g. sleep=sleep-s) is called a stem.
Lexical vs. functional morphemes Two broad types of Morphemes: • Lexical morphemes vs. • functional morphemes
Lexical morphs • Lexical morphemes: • (Known as ‘content words‘) • Lexical morphemes are nouns, adjectives, verbs and adverbs (NAVA words). • This has an important consequences for morphology because lexical morphemes belong to an open class which can expand. • Discuss??
Functional morphs • Functional morphemes: • Also called ‘function words’) and they: • Mostly signal syntactic relationships, & include prepositions (e.g. as - are free function morphemes), pronouns (e.g. his, her) and determiners (e.g. the, a, an). • Functional morphemes belong to closed set that admits no new members (new prepositions, pronouns, and determiners are very rarely added to the language.
Important conclusion! • It follows that the branch of morphology that examines the creation of new vocabulary items is primarily concerned with lexical morphemes
Word formation processes Two broad types of word formation processes: • Inflection versus derivation Discuss the following: a. She sleeps. b. *We sleeps Othman sleeps *They sleeps ltsleeps *You sleeps
What is inflection? • Inflection is syntactically motivated word-formation. • Inflection creates various forms of the same word • E.g. third-person singular subject of a present tense verb (e.g. he reads a book every night) • E.g. Singular Plural this boy (*these boy) those boys (*this boys) that boy (*those boy) those boys (*that boys)
Inflection (1) • English has a small number of inflectional morphemes. • They are all suffixes. Discuss?? • Inflectional suffixes form a closed set(i.e. the language no longer adds to its inventory of inflectional endings. (English used to have considerably more complex inflectional morphology). • Inflection is syntaxdriven. • Many inflectional processes involve agreement. • (subject-verb- number- agreement??).
Some terms.. Genitive: In grammar denoting a case of nouns, pronouns, and adjectives( in grammatical agreement with them) used to indicate a relation of possession or association.
Exercise! • Following the inflectional suffixes tables, think of other examples in English for nouns: • Native irregular plurals vs. borrowed irregular plurals And for verbs: • Regular vs. irregular And for adjectives: • Comparative vs. superlative
Inflection (2) • Inflectional properties may be inherent (a morpheme is associated with its properties regardless of context). • E.g. Countable vs. uncountable nouns Hammer(s) *equipment(s)
Derivation • Derivation is not motivated by the syntax, its roleis to generate new lexical items. • Derivation changing meaning Input Derived word Possible impossible Tell retell Do undo • Derivation changing syntactic category Faith (noun) faithful (adjective) fierce (adjective) fiercely (adverb) sing (verb) singer (noun)
Discuss! • Differences: Inflection vs. Derivation??
Inflection vs. Derivation • Derivationtends to affects the meaning of the word, while inflection tends to affect only its syntactic function. • Derivationtends to be more irregular and sporadic – there are more gaps, the meaning is more idiosyncratic and less compositional, but inflectional morphology is mostly regular. • E.g. all verbs take –ing but we cannot say ( *yellowen) following (whiten and darken). • Therefore, derivational processes tend to be more productive than inflectional ones. • The boundary between derivation and inflection is often fuzzy and unclear. Discus with your partner & give examples
Complex words (containing a sequence of suffixes) such as, Sing-er-s. • The derivational suffixes are nearer to the root (-er) whereas the inflectional plural –s suffix is at the edge of the word.