English Morphology: by Drs. I Wayan Suarnajaya, M.A., PH.D
English Morphology: by Drs. I Wayan Suarnajaya, M.A., PH.D
English Morphology: by Drs. I Wayan Suarnajaya, M.A., PH.D
Texts Discourse
Sentences
Clauses Syntax
Phrases
Words Morphology
Phonemes Phonology
The Other Aspects of Linguistics
Semantics
Pragmatics
Language
Psycholinguistics
Psychology
Language
Sociolinguistics
Sociology
The Definition of Morphology.
- The word morphology is derived from the Greek word
‘morphe’ which means form/shape.
- It is concerned with the status of the word within linguistic
analysis. This status can be questioned as follows:
- Does the word form a natural unit for analysis?
- What are the criteria for determining it?
The word does appear to form a natural unit for analysis. This
can be seen by determining word boundary in a continuous
stream of sound:
Thereisnolovesincererthantheloveoffood
The Identification of Words
a. The definition of words by Leonard Bloomfield (1933): (1)
Words are defined as the smallest units of meaning that are
able to function independently in a language; (2) Words can
also be defined as minimum free forms.
b. The exploration of Bloomfield’s definition of words can be
done from such aspects as: Semantics, Structure, and
Phonology.
1. Semantics. Semantically, a word constitutes a single
meaningful unit. But we have problem with the words:
unappetizing, more tasty (tastier), the delicious food
(representing a single concept).
2. Structure. The exploration of a word as a unit can be viewed
from position, uninterruptibility, the ability of words to stand
alone.
Position
Position:
- It is not possible to rearrange elements within words, but words
themselves as single units show a certain mobility.
- Words can be permuted, while bits/elements of words cannot, except
the words on, not, the.
Uninterruptibility:
- It is not possible to place material within English words since words
constitute single bound units.
- But it is possible to place material between words.
Morphological processes
A. Affixation: is a common method of indicating grammatical
distinctions and of forming new words. This is concerned with
the addition of affixes to stems or roots.
B. Backformation: It is concerned with the formation of new
vocabulary items relying on pattern extension, which works in
the opposite direction by removing an affix. It can happen that
the form (X + affix) exists in the language before the simple
form (X).
bludger – to bludge (to scrounge) baker – bake
Other verbs are: afflict, enthuse, laze, liaise, aggress, grovel,
televise, gate-crash, manhandle, eavesdrop, house-hunt, jell.
contact lens – contact len,
C. Stem modification
Making use of alternations in stem vowels , consonants, tone, and
stress to indicate particular grammatical meanings and to derive new
lexical items. This was once a very important process in English but
now it has a much less significant role to play.
- Vowel modification to indicate tense: drink-drank-drunk, eat-ate-
eaten; man-men, foot – feet.
- The use of affixation as a way of marking tense distinction:
stepped for stope, climbed for clomb.
D. Conversion: Some words can convert to other parts of speech without
adding any affix (conversion = zero affixation).
up – to up, down – to down, the up, a down.
to guess – a guess, to command – a command, to read – a read, to ask
– a big ask,
bottle – to bottle, a bridge – to bridge, a mail – to mail, a thrash – to
thrash, a network – to network, an impact – to impact, a leaflet – to
leaflet. Better – to better, empty – to empty, open –to open,
E. Compounding
kingdom, christendom,
Slang words: egghead, dickhead, acidhead,
blockhead, blubberhead, cheesehead, boofhead,
fathead, meathead, pinhead.
F. Reduplication: is a repetition process whereby all or
part of the stem is repeated and the resulting form is
a kind of compound.
Three types of reduplicated compounds:
- reduplication of the whole stem: goody-goody,
fifty-fifty, hubba-hubba, never-never, hush-hush,
woop-woop, wop-wops (remote area). Nursury
language: woof-woof, Mama, yum-yum, ta-ta, gee-
gee.
- A second type of reduplication involves the repetition of the rhyme,
that is, the root vowel(s) and following consonant (s). Sometimes one,
and sometimes none of the elements are independently meaningful:
argy-bargy, arty-farty, lovey-dovey, helter-skelter, higgledy-piggledy,
super-duper, namby-pamby, hankey-pankey, hokey-pokey, hoity-toity.
Occasionally the stems are both existing words: stun-gun, brain-drain,
flower-power, culture-vulture, and gang-bang. This type of
reduplication is very productive, particularly in slang: tin-grin
(someone with braces), sprain(ed) brain (crazy person).
- The third type of reduplicative compound is rarer than the others. It
involves some sort of modification of the stem vowel: silly-sally, dilly-
dally, mishmash, riff-raff, tick-tock, flip-flop. Many of these are related
to expressive formations, where the sounds attempt to imitate the
sense of the word (for instance hurdy gurdy is somehow appropriate
to the sound of instrument). Sometimes the sounds or sound
sequences come to symbolyse certain meanings and spawn new
formations. The –ing rhyme, for example, has become an expressive
pattern for speakers, producing formation such as ping-pong, ding-
dong, wing-ding, swing-wing, sing-song.
Productive Morphemes