DEFINITION AND TYPES OF MORPHEME
MORPHEME
A. DefinitionA
morpheme is the smallest linguistic unit that
has a meaning. It cannot be divided into smaller parts. For example, unreadable has three morphemes: un, read and able.
B. Types
1. Bound Morphemes
A bound morpheme is a morpheme that cannot stand alone as an independent word,
or in other words a bound morpheme is a grammatical unit that never
occurs by itself, but it is always attached to some other morphemes. The
bound morpheme is not a word. They must be joined to other free morphemes
(words). Bound morpheme consists of derivational and inflectional morpheme.
Also affixes are bound morpheme.. Ex: -ish, un-, -ness, -li-, -s, -er, etc.2. Free Morphemes (Unbound Morphemes) A free morpheme is a
morpheme that can stand alone, or a free morpheme is a grammatical unit that
can occur by itself. They, the free morphemes are a word. Ex: boy, girl, man, gentle, cat, bag, house, etc.3. Inflectional Morphemes
An inflectional morpheme is a morpheme that can only be a
suffix. An inflectional morpheme creates a change in the function in the word,
but Inflectional morphemes do not create new meaning. According to Yule (1996), English has only eight (8) inflectional
morphemes, as follows:
· 2 used with adjectives : -er (comparative) & -est (superlative)
· 2 used with nouns: -s (plural),-'s (possessive)
· 4 used with verbs :-s (3rd person
singular) ,-ed (past tense) ,-en (past participle) & -ing (present
progressive)
4. Derivational Morphemes Derivational
morphemes are also known as the opposite of inflectional morphemes. A
derivational morpheme is a morpheme that can be added to a word to create or to
drive another word. This type changes the meaning of the word or the part of
speech or both (a new word with a new meaning). Ex: -ation, un-, -al, -ize,
-ous, -y, etc. In rationalization (ration-al-iz-ation-s) the final -s is
inflectional, and appears at the every end of the word, outside the derivational
morphemes -al, -iz, -ation.5. Closing Morphemes & Nonclosing Morphemes A morpheme such a –ize in the words in the
words formalizeand legalize is not a closing morpheme (nonclosing morpheme),
because we can add other words after it. Ex: formalizer andlegalization. –er and ion in those words are not a closing morpheme (nonclosing
morpheme), because we can still add plural –s, and the –s is a closing
morpheme.
6. Affixes : Prefixes & Suffixesa.Prefixes : a form like ex-, anti-, un-, ad-, com-, dis-, in-, re-,
mis- or inter- which can be added to the front of a word to give an additional or
different meaning. Ex: ex-wife, anti-British,unhappy.
b.Suffixes : a form like -ology, -ance(-ence), -ful, ness,
ment, -able, or –ese, which can be added to the end of a word to give an
additional or different meaning. Ex: understandable, believable,
biology,
7. Root morpheme A root morpheme
is the primary lexical unit of a word, and cannot be reduced into smaller
constituents. the term "root" is generally synonymous with
"free morpheme", but the roots may sometimes be bound morpheme. The
bound roots are relatively few, but some are found, such as –ceive, -tain,
and –cur inreceive, retain, contain, recur, etc. Example:· run is
the root of running· dog is
the root of dogs· child is
the root of children· mouse is
the root of mice· rupt is
the root of interrupt<see stem morpheme
for further>8. Stem morpheme
A stem is a part of a word. The
term is used with slightly different meanings. 'Stem' and 'root' have more or less the same
meaning: the form of a word after all affixes have been removed. So the root or
stem of 'unreadable' is read. We can say that readis a morpheme, stem and
root at the same time. Similarly in the words manly the form man- is at the same time a root and a stem. But in the word breakwaters the stem is breakwater, and it’s not a single root. There are two
morphemes, break and water.Another
example: The stem of the verb wait is wait:
it is the part that is common to all its inflected variants.1. wait (infinitive)2. wait (imperative)3. waits
(present, 3rd person, singular)4. wait (present,
other persons and/or plural)5. waited
(simple past)6. waited
(past participle)7. waiting
(progressive) Look:base: reactionsstem: reaction (s)root: (re) act (ion) (s)The stem is the base with all inflectional suffixes
removed, whereas the root is what remains after all affixes have been taken
off.9. Nuclear and Peripheral Structure
A nuclear consists nucleus. A peripheral morpheme usually consists of a nonroot
and is always ‘outside’ of the nuclear.Ex: the word formal the nuclear element (nuclear structure) isform-, and
the peripheral element (peripheral morpheme) is –al. In the word formalize the nuclear structure is formal-, and the peripheral
morpheme is –ize. Similarly in formalizer the nuclear structure is formalize-, and the peripheral morpheme is –er.
· Bikers
- Bike : free, root, or stem morpheme
- -er : bound, derivational, nonclosing, or suffix
morpheme
- -s : bound, inflectional, closing, peripheral,
or suffix morpheme
- Biker-s : the biker is nuclear, and the –s
is peripheral morpheme.
· Refusal
- Refuse : free, root, or stem morpheme
- -al : bound, derivational, or suffix morpheme
- Refuse-al : the refuse is a nuclear, and the –al
is a peripheral morpheme.
· Impossibility
- Im- : bound, derivational, or prefix morpheme
- Possible : free, root, or stem morpheme
- -ity : bound, derivational, suffix, or
peripheral morpheme
- Impossible-ity : the impossible is a nuclear,
and the –ity is a peripheral morpheme.
· Breakwaters
- Break : free or root morpheme
- Water : free or root morpheme
- -s : bound morpheme, inflectional,
peripheral morpheme,
- Breakwater- : the breakwater is a stem morpheme
also as a nuclear.
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