751 - Lecture III
751 - Lecture III
751 - Lecture III
The most basic concept of morphology is the concept of a word. There are two different
notions of word: a dictionary word and a text word. A dictionary word is an abstract entity called
a lexeme (this is because the mental dictionary in our heads is called the lexicon). A text word is a
concrete entity called a word-form. Word-forms are concrete as they can be pronounced and used
in texts.
A set of word-forms of one lexeme expressing a categorical grammatical meaning represents
its grammatical paradigm. For instance, the words live, lives, lived, has lived or has been living are
different word-forms of the lexeme live, therefore they constitute its grammatical paradigm.
Different lexemes may also be related to each other. A set of related lexemes represents a word
family. For example, the word family of the English word “read” is: read, readable, unreadable,
reader, readability, reread, etc.
There are two kinds of morphological relationship among words:
1. derivational relationship which exists among lexemes of a word family. E.g.: beauty,
beautiful, beautifully, beautify, etc.
2. inflectional relationship which exists among word-forms within the paradigm of a
lexeme. For instance, the word-forms give, gives, gave, is giving, has given, has been
giving, etc. are interconnected through inflectional relationship.
What does morphology study? Morphology studies internal structure of words and the rules
by which words are formed. The term morphology was invented in the second part of the 19 th
century. It derives from Greek and means “the science of word forms” (morphe = “form”, -ology
= “science of”).
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Basic morphological concepts of English grammar.
Roots and Stems
Every word in every language may be composed of one or more morphemes. For instance,
the word boys consists of two morphemes one of which ( boy) is the root morpheme which is
built up by a sequence of phonemes, whereas the other morpheme ( –s) is an affixal inflexion
indicating grammatical meaning of number (plural).
A root is a lexical, content morpheme that cannot be subdivided any further into smaller
parts (ძირი არის ლექსიკური შინაარსის მქონე მორფემა, რომელიც აღარ იშლება პატარა
ნაწილებად). When a root morpheme is combined with a derivational affix it forms a stem
(ფუძე), which may or may not be a word (painter is both a word and a stem; ceive + er is only a
stem).
Morphologically complex words consist of a root and one or more affixes. There are three
types of affixal morphemes: prefixes, suffixes and inflexions. Of these, prefixes and suffixes have
word-building or derivational function and when they are affixed to roots, they change lexical
meaning and grammatical class of the word (e.g.: beauty - beautiful; interest – interesting, etc.).
Unlike them, inflexions have only grammatical or form-building function. They never change
grammatical class of the word to which they are attached, they only mark morphological
categories such as tense, aspect, voice, number, case and so forth (e.g.: plays, played, playing; girl,
girls, etc.).
Compared to many languages of the world, English has relatively few inflections. According
to Fromkin’s data, at the present stage of English history, there are totally eight inflectional affixes
(“An Introduction to Linguistics” by Fromkin et al. 2003: 100-101).
English Inflectional Morphemes Examples
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Bound and free Morphemes. Allomorphs.
One of the things we know about particular morphemes is whether they can stand alone or
must be attached to a host morpheme. Accordingly, linguists differentiate free and bound
morphemes. Morphemes, that can stand alone and constitute words by themselves, are free
morphemes. Free morphemes can only be represented by root morphemes. For instance,
morphemes like boy, desire, gentle, man are free morphemes. Morphemes that cannot form words
by themselves and are always attached to a host morpheme, are bound morphemes (ბმული
მორფემები). They are identified only as component parts of words. That’s why they are always
represented by affixal morphemes (prefixes, suffixes and inflexions). For instance, in the word
handful the root hand is a free morpheme, while the suffix -ful is a bound morpheme.
Morphemes may have different pronunciations or shapes under different circumstances. For
such cases, linguists use the term allomorph. If two or more morphs have the same meaning or
function and the difference in their form is explained by different environments, they are
considered to be the allomorphs of the same morpheme. For instance, [s], [z] and [iz] are the
allomorphs of the plural morpheme in English: [s] is pronounced after voiceless consonants ( cats,
cups, pets, etc.); [z] is pronounced after vowels and voiced consonants ( toys, dogs, bags, apples,
etc.), [iz] is pronounced in the words like faces, cases, paces and in the words ending in -s, -ss,
-sh, -ch and -x as in buses, businesses, bushes, benches, boxes, and so on. Or the morpheme - en
as in children and oxen.
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Inner inflection or grammatical infixation is based on vowel interchange. Inner inflection is
used to form the past indefinite and past participle of English irregular verbs or it is also used in a
few nouns to form their plural. For instance:
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Study questions: