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Morphology: DR Arup Kumar Nath

Morphology is the study of word formation and structure. It examines the meaningful units called morphemes that make up words, including free morphemes that can stand alone and bound morphemes like affixes. Words are formed through processes like inflection involving changes in grammatical elements like number, and derivation adding affixes to change word classes or meanings. Common derivational affixes are prefixes, suffixes, and in some languages infixes. Roots, stems, and bases are the core elements words are built upon.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
96 views

Morphology: DR Arup Kumar Nath

Morphology is the study of word formation and structure. It examines the meaningful units called morphemes that make up words, including free morphemes that can stand alone and bound morphemes like affixes. Words are formed through processes like inflection involving changes in grammatical elements like number, and derivation adding affixes to change word classes or meanings. Common derivational affixes are prefixes, suffixes, and in some languages infixes. Roots, stems, and bases are the core elements words are built upon.

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Whanty
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Dr Arup Kumar Nath

MORPHOLOGY
What is Morphology?

 Morphology is the scientific study of word


formation.
 Minimal meaningful / grammatical unit of a
word.
 The study of patterns of word formation.
 How words are originated, grammatical
forms, on what basis the word class is formed
etc.
Words and Morphemes

 Word (SIL): A word is a unit which is


constituent at the phrase level and above.
 This is being the minimal possible unit of a
reply.
 It has regular stress pattern, being the
smallest constituent that can be moved
within a sentence without making the
sentence ungrammatical.
Morpheme

 Minimal, meaningful unit of a word or in the


grammar of a language.
 Not further divisible or analyzable into
smaller forms.
 The units of ‘lowest’ rank out of which words,
the units of next highest rank are composed.
 If we try to break up a morpheme, it loses its
identity and it left with meaningless noises.
Morpheme

 Semantically different from other


phonemically similar or identical linguistic
forms. Eg. Speaker, deer, faster
 A sound sequence is not always regarded as a
morpheme. Eg: man—*woman, unnatural,
unfaithful, *under, *sun
 It could be also termed as an abstract unit of
meaning.
 A synonym for morpheme is glosseme
Examples:

 Unladylike
 Un+ lady+ like
 Encouragement
 En+ courage+ ment
 Disillusionment
 Dis+ illusion+ ment
 Anti-naxalism
 Anti+ naxal+ ism
What is morph then?

 A morph is the phonetic realization of a


morpheme. The real form of the morpheme,
the actual utterance of the morpheme.
 A formal unit with a physical shape.
 This is similar to the concept called ‘phone’ in
phonology
Allomorph

 Allomorph is phonologically distinct variants of


the same morpheme.
 Different realization, manifestation of the same
morpheme.
 They vary in shape or pronunciation according to
their condition of use.
 They are a class of morphs which are
semantically identical.
 They are derived from phonological and
morphophonemic rules.
Examples of Allomorph
 English plural morpheme [s]
 Phonologically conditioned-
 [-s] with morphs ending in /p, t, k/, etc. i.e. with
voiceless sounds such as cats, thanks etc.
 [-z] with morphs ending in /b, d, g, v, l/ etc. i.e.
with voiced morphs such as dogs (dogz), rims
(rimz) etc..
 [-iz] with morphs ending in /z, , t/ etc. i.e. with
sibilants, affricates, fricatives such as buses,
boxes, horses, classes etc.
Morpheme types:

 Free morpheme: A free morpheme is a word


that can occur by itself. It can stand alone.
However, we can add other morphemes in it.
E.g. boy, man, establish, measure etc are free
morphemes.
 Bound morpheme: It is a grammatical unit
that never occurs by itself, but is always
attached to some other morphemes such as
[s] in cats, [ness] in kindness, [ize] in visualize
etc.
Affixation
an affix is a bound morpheme that is joined
before, after or within a root or stem.

 Types of affixes
 Prefix: this is added before the root or stem
of the word. E.g. unpredictable, unresponsive,
revitalize, etc.
 Suffix: a suffix is an affix that is attached to
the end of a root or stem. E.g. the plural
formatives, -s, -en, -ing, -d, -er, -est, and –
less, -ment, -ion, etc.
Affix types

 Infix: An infix is an affix that is inserted within


a root or stem. It is added in the base form of
a word to create a new word or intensify
meaning. E.g.
 In Philippines (Tagalog)
 buli root, ‘buy’
 -um- infix, ‘agentive’
 Bumili ‘ bought’

 In Indonesian:
 Cerlang ‘luminous’, cemerlang ‘ brilliant’
Affix types

 Circumfixes: Consists of two parts- a prefix


and a suffix that together create a new word.
The prefix and suffix are not considered as
separate. E.g. In Dutch berg ‘mountain’ ge-
berg-te ‘mountain chain’.
 Simulfix: A simulfix is a change or
replacement of vowels or consonants (usually
vowels) which changes the meaning of a
word: E.g. eat ate, tooth  teeth etc.
Root, Stem, Base

 Root: A root is the irreducible core of a word,


with absolutely nothing else attached to it.
E.g. jump- jumps, jumping, jumped. Here,
jump is the root.
 Stem: the stem is that part of a word that
exists before the addition of any inflectional
morpheme. E.g. worker workers, shift
shifted
Root, Stem, Base

 Base: Base is any unit of a word where any


kind of affixes can be added. It could be both
inflectional or derivational. E.g. boy  boys,
boy  boyish, boy  boyhood
 The bottom-line: All roots are bases, bases
are called stem in context of inflectional
morphology
Inflectional & Derivational

 Inflectional morpheme: Inflectional word


formation is word formation that expresses
grammatical distinctions. They perform
certain grammatical functions like:
 number (singular vs plural), E.g. cat-cats,
child-children etc.
 tense (present vs past) E.g. walk-walks-
walking, walked
 person (first, second, third) E.g. 3rd PSG
Inflectional--

 Case (subject, object, possessive) E.g.


mother’s child, mothers’ children etc.
 It doesn’t result in the creation of new lexeme
or words.
 It changes the grammatical form of lexemes
to fit into different grammatical context.
 Inflectional is more relevant to syntax
 Inflectional morphemes don’t change
meaning and word class.
Inflectional--

 Inflectional morphemes are very productive


in nature.
 Inflectional morphemes are limited in
number.
 Inflectional morphemes usually block further
affixation of a suffix. Eg agree + ed *[-s]
Derivational Morphemes

 In derivation a new word is formed by adding


an affix to the root or stem
 Derivational morphemes form new words
either:
a) by changing the meaning of the base to
which they are attached. E.g. kind  unkind
(adjectives), obey  disobey (verbs)
b) by changing the word-class that a base
belongs to. E.g. kind kindly,simple-> simply
Derivation of Nouns

 Verb  Noun
speak speaker
swim swimming
read reader/ reading
Adjective Noun
kind kindness
good goodness
black blackness
Noun Noun
mother motherhood
sense  non-sense
Derivation of Nouns

 Apart from these process we can also add


suffixes such as –hood (status), -ship (state or
condition), -ness(quality, state or condition) ,
-ity (state or condition), -ment (result or
product of doing the action), -al (act of smthg),
-er (agentive), in the words like brotherhood,
friendship, wildness, sincerity, government,
refusal, walker etc.
Derivation of Adjective

 Noun  Adjective
master masterly
brother brotherly
 Verb  adjective
read readable
love loveable
 Adjective to adjective
common uncommon
possible  impossible
Derivation of Adjective

 We also have some suffixes which are used to


form adjective such as –less (without), -ful
(having), -ic (pertaining to), -al (pertaining to or
of the kind) in the words like, powerless,
colorless, powerful, democratic, medicinal, etc.
 There are also some prefixes which are used
to derive adjective: -in (inaccuracy), -im
(improper) etc.
Derivation of Verbs

 Noun  Verb
analysis analyze
slave enslave
 Adjective verb
rich  enrich
legal  legalize
 Verb verb
continue discontinue
pack  unpack
Derivation of Verbs

 Prefixes used for deriving verbs


-re (revisit), en (encage)
 Suffixes used for deriving verbs
-ize (nationalize, sympathize),
-fy (codify, modify)
Word Formation Processes

 Conversion: In some languages it is possible


to form new lexeme merely by shifting the
word category without adding any affixes. In
English: table to table
chair  to chair
to click  a click
In Dutch: hamer (hammer)  hamer-en (to
hammer)
winkel(shop)  winkel-en (to shop)
Word Formation Processes

 Coinage: In this process, a complete new word is


added. The root is normally the new word. Later on other
affixation can be added. E.g. xerox, sim, googling, yahoo,
smsing
 Sometimes, these lexicons also get the status of
common noun like surf (for all detergent), colgate (for all
toothpaste)
 Googling (searching), seascape (like landscape,
cheeseburger (like hamburger)
 In Assamese: সপ্তাহান্তিক, পন্তিবেশ্য কলা, সমসাজ,
ভ্রামযভাষ, জালপঞ্জী ইত্যান্তি।
Word Formation Processes

 Back Formation: Here, the direction of


derivation is inverted.
 The less complex word is derived from the
more complex word by omitting something.
E.g. to sculpt  sculptor
babysit  babysitter
terminate  terminator
িা িািা, ো োইবিউ
Word Formation Processes

 Blending: This is the combination of the first


or complete part of one word and second part
of another.
 Examples:
stagflation: stagnation+ inflation
fantabulous: fantastic + fabulous
happenstance: happening + instance
splog: spam + blog
blogebrity: blog + celebrity
youngistan: young + hindustan
Word Formation Processes

 Acronym and Initialism: When the first letters


of words are taken to create a new word alike,
it is called acronym. When it is not like a
word, it is known as abbreviation or initialism.
E.g. AASU, NASA, AIDS
 Sometimes more than one letter is taken to
make acronym. E.g. RADAR (Radio detecting
and ranging), MODEM (Modulator and
demodulator) etc.
Word Formation Processes

 Reverse Acronym: the creator starts with as


words, then put different words to represent
all the letters. E.g.
 HOPE– Health Opportunity for People
Everywhere
PUSH– People United to Serve Humanity
Word Formation Processes

 Clipping: It is a means of creating new words


by shortening already existing words- usually
a single syllable. This is usually done to save
time and space. E.g.
 Quiz  inquisitive
 prof  professor
 Bus  omnibus
 Flu  influenza
 Info  information
Word Formation Processes

 Eponym: These are new words based on


proper nouns/ names. They all involve some
degree of change in the meaning of the word.
 E.g. boycott, nicotine, sandwich, hamburger,
Jean, atlas, nemesis (greek god), platonic,
panic (greek god), assassin etc.
 ধ ািি আন্তল, কন্তলয়া ধভাবমািা ইত্যান্তি ।
Word Formation Processes

 Reduplication: In this process all or part of the


base is repeated as prefix or suffix.
 Examples: willy-nilly, hodge-podge, hanky-
panky, so-so etc.
 Full reduplication: good-good, small-small,
big-big, লাবহ-লাবহ, ীবি- ীবি
 Partial reduplication: zig-zag, মাছ-ত্াছ,
ন্তিহবক-ন্তত্হবক
Word Formation Processes

 Compounding: When two words or at least


two root morphemes are joined together, the
derived word results a compounding.
 Example: tea+ pot  teapot, week + end 
weekend , greenhouse, windmill, kindhearted
 Types: Right-headed: greenhouse is a kind of
house, skyblue is a kind of blue.
 French and Vietnamese have left headed
compounding.
Word Formation Processes

 In Synthetic Compound, the head lexeme is


derived from a verb such as hand-washing, user-
driven, home-made etc.
 In Attributive compounds, the non-head works
as a modifier like snail-mail, windmill.
 In Endocentric the referent of the compound is
always same as the referent of its head.
Windmill, blackbird
 In Exocentric the derived word has an external
reference. Pickpocket.
Portmanteau / Zero / Null

 Portmanteau: When a single morpheme


represents simultaneously two or more
grammatical functions is called portmanteau
morpheme. Examples:
 In French [-s] in the word prends (to take)
represents first or second person, singular and
present tense
 In English [-s] is added to denote singular,
present, 3rd P, and also plural.
 Hindi ‘hu’ –be verb, 1PS and Present.
Portmanteau / Zero / Null

 Zero/ Null: A zero morpheme doesn’t have


explicit phonetic form.
 In English, the plural morpheme of the words
two sheep, two furniture, two equipment have
no overt morpheme.
 Null morpheme is also present in English
verb. Eg. Run run  run, cut  cut  cut
 END OF THEORETICAL PART. LETS HAVE
SOME ASSAMESE EXAMPLES
Assamese Inflectional

 Inflectional morphemes are usually known as


Bivakti (ন্তেভক্তি) in Assamese.
 Nominal inflection: িাম+এ= িাবম,
মানুহজন+এ=মানুহজবন
 As instrumental case: কুঠাবিবি, িাবি
 Other inflectionals: ধেিত্, হাত্ত্, মানুহি
 Verbal inflection: kha, kha-le, kha-isil, kha-ise, kha-bo,
kha-iso, kha-ba
Assamese Derivational

 Assamese has good number of derivational


morphemes.
 Suffixes added to verbs (Krit Pratyay)
ak- as in likh + ak = likhak
gan+ ak = ganak
an – as in ga + an = gayan
ana- as in baj+ ana = bajana
khund + ana = khundan
ani- as in nas + ani = nasani
randh+ ani = randhani
Assamese Derivational

 Ania – as in bhag + ania = bhagania


bila+ ania = bilania
aniar as in dekh + aniar = dekhaniar
 Suffixes added to Nouns and Adjectives (tadhit
Pratyay)
kheti + ak = khetiak
xahai + ak = xahayak
ban + ani= banani
dhan + ani = dhanani
Assamese Derivational

 Prefixal derivational (Upaxarga)


 a- as in abisar, ajgyan, aparipati
 Aa – as in aamaran, aamitru
 Ao– as in aopurani, aohat
 Ana- as in anatar, anabristi,
 Ni- as in nirax, nilaz, nimat
 Xu– as in xunam, xukhabar
 Ku- as in kukhyat, kusakra etc.

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