Студопедия
Случайная страница | ТОМ-1 | ТОМ-2 | ТОМ-3
АвтомобилиАстрономияБиологияГеографияДом и садДругие языкиДругоеИнформатика
ИсторияКультураЛитератураЛогикаМатематикаМедицинаМеталлургияМеханика
ОбразованиеОхрана трудаПедагогикаПолитикаПравоПсихологияРелигияРиторика
СоциологияСпортСтроительствоТехнологияТуризмФизикаФилософияФинансы
ХимияЧерчениеЭкологияЭкономикаЭлектроника

Meaning in Morphemes

Читайте также:
  1. A) Pair off the units with the similar meaning. Give your grounds.
  2. A. Rewrite the sentences without using the underlined words. Keep the meaning the same.
  3. Authentic, meaningful language
  4. B) Define the meanings of the idioms from the context, translate the sentences into Ukrainian.
  5. B. Understanding meaning from context.
  6. Before you read the article, check the meaning of these words and phrases and memorize them.
  7. C) In groups discuss the meaning of the question.

Morphemes. Types of morphemes and their meaning

Morphemes, types of morphemes

Meaning in Morphemes

 

Morphemes, types of morphemes

 

I. Morpheme

A word as an autonomous unit of a language in which a particular meaning is associated with a particular sound complex and which is capable of a particular grammatical employment and able to form a sentence by itself.

A morpheme is an other fundamental language unit, an association of a given meaning with a given sound pattern. But unlike a word it is not autonomous.

Morphemes occur in speech only as constituent parts of words, not independently, although a word may consist of a single morpheme. Nor are they divisible into smaller meaningful language units. That is why the morpheme may be defined as the minimum meaningful language unit. The term morpheme is derived from Gr morphē “form” + - eme. The greek suffix – eme has been adopted by linguists to denote the smallest unit of theminimum distinctive feature. (Cf. phoneme, sememe).

II. Types of morphemes

Themorpheme is the smallest meaningful unit of form. A form inthese cases is a recurring discrete unit of speech.A form is said to be free if it may stand alone withoutchanging its meaning; if not it is a bound form, so called becauseit is always bound to something else. For example, if we comparethe words sportive and elegant and their parts, we see that sport, sportive and elegant may occur alone as utterances, whereas eleg-, ive, -ant are bound forms because they never occur alone. A word is a minimum free form.

A morpheme is said to be either bound or free. It means that some morphemes are capable of forming words without adding other morphemes: that is they are homonymous to free forms. According to the role they play in constructing words, morphemes are subdivided into roots and affixes. The affixes are further subdivided, according to their position, into prefixes, suffixes and infixes, and according to their function and meaning, into derivational and functional affixes, the latter also called endings or outer formatives.

When a derivational or functional affix is stripped from the word, what remains is a stem. The stem expresses the lexical and the part of speech meaning. For the word hearty and for paradigm heart-hearts the stem may be represented as heart-. This stem is a single morpheme, it contains nothing but the root, so it is a simple stem. It also a free stem because it is homonymous to the word heart.

A stem may also be defined as the part of the word that remains unchanged throughout the paradigm. The stem of the paradigm hearty-heartier- the heartiest is hearty -. It is a free stem, but as it consists of a root morpheme and an affix, it is not simple but derived.

Thus, a stem containing one or more affixes is a derived stem. If after deducing the affix the remaining stem is not homonymous to a separate word of the same root, we call it bound stem. Thus, in the word cordial “ proceeding as if from the heart”, the adjective-forming suffix can be separated on the analogy with such words as bronchial, radial, social. The remaining stem, however, cannot form a separate word by itself: it is bound. In cordially and cordiality, on the other hand, the stems are free.

Morphemes form an autonomous subsystem of language units. Each morpheme has its norm of combinability with certain other morphemes, cf.: breakage, develop-ment – break-ment, develop-age.

Morphemes may be homonymous (mother ly - quick ly), synonymous (in active - un happy), antonymous (use ful -use less).

Affixal morphemes carry grammatical and lexical meaning. Functional affixes belong to grammar, they build word-forms: ask-ed, long-er. Lexicology is mainly interested in derivational affixes, as they build words: boy-hood, boy-ish, boy-like.

Lexical morphology deals with two different problems: word-structure (segmentation of words into morphemes) and word-formation (making new words with the help of morphemes).

Meaning in Morphemes

1. Lexical meaning of morphemes may be analysed into denotational and connotational components. The denotational meaning in affixes is more generalized than in root-morphemes, e.g. –er carries the meaning the doer of the action: reader, teacher, singer.

All endearing and diminutive suffixes bear a heavy emotive charge (connotational meaning): -ie (girlie, dearie); -ette (kitchenette). Many stylistically marked affixes are bookish or scientific (connotational meaning): a- (amoral); -oid (rhomboid).

2. All suffixes and some prefixes possess grammatical (part-of-speech) meaning: -ness (emptiness) carries the nominal meaning of thingness.

Rootmorphemes do not possess any grammatical meaning: in the root-morpheme man- (manly) there is no grammatical meaning of case and number observed in the word man. Grammatical and lexical meaning in suffixes are blended: -er (teacher) carries the meaning thingness (noun) and the doer of the action.

 


Дата добавления: 2015-10-31; просмотров: 160 | Нарушение авторских прав


<== предыдущая страница | следующая страница ==>
D Theater System Description| Topic 6. TIME SERIES ANALYSIS

mybiblioteka.su - 2015-2024 год. (0.007 сек.)