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Page 1: What’s morphology
Page 2: What’s morphology

What’s morphology?

Morphology is the study of the

structure of words.

It deals with the internal

structure of words.

Matthews, P.H. (1991). Morphology, Cambridge textbook in linguistics. Cambridge;

Cambridge University Press.

Page 3: What’s morphology

However, the concept of word itself

defies simple definition. In English

words tend to be smaller than the

sentence, and we combine words to

form sentences.

Page 4: What’s morphology

One tricky thing, however, is that

in many languages, a single word

can have “sentence” meaning.

Here’s an example from

Spanish: hazmelo.

Page 5: What’s morphology

One word, one sentence

This “word” is actually a

command that is best translated

as “do it for me” [do (haz) it (lo)

for me (me)].

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Into smaller units

If we take English as an example,

we have a clear sense that

sentences can be broken down

into smaller units (words), each

of which generally contributes

to the meaning of the whole.

Page 7: What’s morphology

For example: Pigs like mud

is a sentence containing three

words

(pigs, like, mud).

Morphology is the study of word

structure and word formation.

Page 8: What’s morphology

Morpheme

The smallest meaningful part of

a word is called a morpheme.

Page 9: What’s morphology

Note

Not all words have more than one

morpheme.

Page 10: What’s morphology

Monomorphemic word

Words that have only one

morpheme are also called

monomorphemic words (e.g. pig).

Page 11: What’s morphology

Polymorphemic word

Words with more than one

morpheme are called

polymorphemic words, as in

foolishness (fool + ish + ness).

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How many morphemes does the world have?

It is comprised of three morphemes:

1.-

Govern

2.-

-ment

3.-

-s

Governments

Page 13: What’s morphology

Note that govern is the kind of

morpheme that can also stand on its

own, as in the sentence,

“Some people think it is a good idea to

govern with an iron fist”.

Page 14: What’s morphology

Free Morpheme

Morphemes that can stand on

their own are called

free morphemes.

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Cannot stand on their own

The other two morphemes,

[-ment] and [-s], cannot stand on

their own. Rather, they have to be

attached, i.e. they have to make

up part of a large word.

Page 16: What’s morphology

Bound Morpheme

Morphemes that cannot stand on

their own are called

bound morphemes.

Page 17: What’s morphology

Free morphemes

can stand alone,

while

Bound morphemes cannot

Page 18: What’s morphology

There’s even more exciting news on the

morpheme front. Let’s focus more closely

on the two bound morphemes

[-ment] and [-s]

in the word [govern-ment-s].

More important distintions

Page 19: What’s morphology
Page 20: What’s morphology

They do not have the same

function

While [-ment] is added to the verb

“govern” to give us a new word, the

noun “government”,

[-s] simply makes the noun plural.

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The diference is that [-ment] is a

derivational suffix,

while plural [-s] is an inflectional

suffix.

Derivational and inflectional

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Affixation: a way of building up words

by adding prefixes, suffixes, infixes, or

a combination of these. Example:

[cat-s] is formed by affixation. In

particular, by the suffixation of the

plural morpheme [-s].

Word formation processes

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Derivation: a way of building up

words by adding prefixes or

suffixes.

Derivational

Page 24: What’s morphology

Coinage: a way of building up words new

form.

Kleenex, nylon, Xerox, aspirin, etc.

Coinage

Page 25: What’s morphology

Borrowing: words taken from other

languages.

Alcohol (Arabic), boss (Dutch),

croissant (French), piano (Italian),

pretzel (German),

pyjamas/pajamas (Hindi),

chocolate (Azteca), etc.

Borrowing

Page 26: What’s morphology

Compounding: a way of building up

words by combining two words.

Blackbird, air conditioner, bookcase,

timetable, drugstore, bathroom,

suitcase, schoolbooks, backyard,

wallpaper, whiteboard, sunglasses,

toothpaste, newspaper, etc.

Compounding

Page 27: What’s morphology

Blending: blending is like

compounding in that it involves

combining words. But, a part of

each word gets lost along the way.

Motel (motor + hotel), smog (smoke

+ fog), telecast (television + cast),

etc.

Blending

Page 28: What’s morphology

Clipping: words that are reduced.

Ad (advertisement), lab (laboratory), math (mathematics), fans (fanatics), doc (doctor), paper (newspaper), plane (airplane), etc.

Clipping

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Conversion: a change of a function

of a word. It can be a noun used as

a verb.

Hammer, butter, water, book, etc.

Conversion

Page 30: What’s morphology

Acronyms: the initials of an expression.

ELT English Language Teaching.

ESL English as a Secound Language.

EFL English as a Foreign Language.

EAP English for Academic purpose.

Acronyms

Page 31: What’s morphology

Multiple processes: words that can have

different uses.

Deli (delicatessen) --- clipping and

borrowing

Snowball --- the problems snowballed ---

conversion and compounding.

Multiple processes

Page 32: What’s morphology

Bibliography

Matthews, P.H. (1991). Morphology, Cambridge textbook in

linguistics. Cambridge; Cambridge University Press.

Katamba, F. (1993). Morphology. New York; St. Martin’s Press.

Stockwell, R. & Minkova, D. (2003). English Words: History and

Structure. Cambridge; Cambridge University Press.