Intro To Ling 6 - Morphology - Tugas
Intro To Ling 6 - Morphology - Tugas
Intro To Ling 6 - Morphology - Tugas
MORPHOLOGY
A. INTRODUCTION
1. Description of the Chapter
This chapter discusses words parts in details. It serves as the extended discussions of
the previous chapter (Chapter 5). The courses will cover the types of morphemes in
terms of free or bound, lexical or functional, and derivational or inflectional. In
addition, the problems of morphological description will also be discussed.
2. Relevance
This chapter is related to the topic discussions of the previous chapter as it serves as
extended discussions. Besides, this will be relevant to the next discussions.
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B. MATERIAL ORGANIZATION
1. Material Description
a. Morphology
In many languages, what appear to be single forms actually turn out to
contain a large number of ‘word-like’ elements. (the Swahili example in the
text book will be replaced by an Arabic one). What seems to be one word in
Arabic َ ﺳَﺄ ُﻧﻘِﺬ ُكconveys what, in English, would have to be represented as
something like I will rescue you.
The term morphology , which literally means ‘the study of forms’, was
originally used in biology, but, since the middle of the nineteenth century, has
also been used to describe the type of investigation that analyzes all those
basic ‘elements’ used in a language. What we have been describing as
‘elements’ in the form of a linguistic message are technically known as
‘morphemes’.
b. Morphemes
The comparison we made between the Arabic utterance and its English
equivalent made it clear that there are elements in what may seem only one
entity. But we still can recognize that English word forms such as talks,
talker, talked and talking must consist of one element talk, and a number of
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other elements such as -s, -er, -ed and -ing. All these elements are described
as morphemes.
The definition of a morpheme is “a minimal unit of meaning or grammatical
function”. Units of grammatical function include forms used to indicate past
tense or plural, for example, the word reopened consists of three morphemes.
One minimal unit of meaning is open, another minimal unit of meaning is re-
(meaning ‘again’) and a minimal unit of grammatical function is -ed
(indicating past tense). The word tourists also contains three morphemes.
There is one minimal unit of meaning tour, another minimal unit of meaning
-ist (marking ‘person who does something’), and a minimal unit of
grammatical function -s (indicating plural).
In words such as receive, reduce and repeat, we can identify the bound
morpheme re- at the beginning, but the elements -ceive, -duce and -peat are
not separate word forms and hence cannot be free morphemes. These types of
forms are sometimes described as ‘bound stems’ to keep them distinct from
‘free stems’ such as dress and care.
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d. Lexical and functional morphemes
There are two types of free morphemes. The first is that set of ordinary
nouns, adjectives and verbs that we think of as the words that carry the
‘content’ of the messages we convey. These free morphemes are called
lexical morphemes. The second is what is called functional morphemes.
Examples are and, but, when, because, on, near, above, in, the, that, it, them.
This set consists largely of the functional words in the language such as
conjunctions, prepositions, articles and pronouns. Because we almost never
add new functional morphemes to the language, they are described as a
‘closed’ class of words.
The second set of bound morphemes contains what are called inflectional
morphemes. These are not used to produce new words in the language, but
rather to indicate aspects of the grammatical function of a word. Inflectional
morphemes are used to show if a word is plural or singular, if it is past tense
or not, and if it is a comparative or possessive form. English has only eight
inflectional morphemes (or ‘inflections’), illustrated below:
Noun + -’s, -s : (teacher’s book / teachers)
Verb + -s, -ing, -ed, -en : (teaches / teaching / played / taken)
Adjective + -est, -er : (younger / youngest)
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f. Morphological description
The difference between derivational and inflectional morphemes is worth
emphasizing. An inflectional morpheme never changes the grammatical
category of a word. For example, both old and older are adjectives. However,
a derivational morpheme can change the grammatical category of a word.
The verb teach becomes the noun teacher if we add the derivational
morpheme -er. So, the suffix -er in modern English can be an inflectional
morpheme as part of an adjective and also a distinct derivational morpheme
as part of a noun. Just because they look the same (-er) doesn’t mean they do
the same kind of work. A useful way to remember all these different types of
morphemes is in the following chart.
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can we take -al off the word legal to get the stem leg? Unfortunately, the
answer is “No”. It has been pointed out that an extremely large number of
English words owe their morphological patterning to languages like Latin
and Greek. Consequently, a full description of English morphology will have
to take account of both historical influences and the effect of borrowed
elements.
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2. Exercises
a. In each of the following groups of word forms, identify those that are (or can
be, according to context) forms of the same lexeme:
1) woman, woman’s, women, womanly, girl
2) greenish, greener, green, greens
3) written, wrote, writer, rewrites, writing.
c. Which of the forms in question 2 are irregular? Are any of them suppletive?
d. Identify at least one adjective, not mentioned in the chapter that has a
suppletive comparative form.
e. In the chapter, it was said that, broadly speaking, the superlative suffix -est is
limited to single-syllable adjectives. Some of the following adjectives show
that this is an oversimplification. Which ones? (Consult a native speaker, if
necessary. Do not be surprised if different speakers disagree!)
GENTLE COMMON PRECISE REMOTE
3. Summary
C. CLOSING
1. Test
2. References
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