Ch 4 Morphology Questions? Comments? Last minute Phonology questions? Ch 4 Morphology Chapter 4 Chapter 4 Exx: 2, 4, 13, 14, 19, 20 due.

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Transcript Ch 4 Morphology Questions? Comments? Last minute Phonology questions? Ch 4 Morphology Chapter 4 Chapter 4 Exx: 2, 4, 13, 14, 19, 20 due.

Ch 4 Morphology
Questions? Comments?
Last minute Phonology questions?
Ch 4 Morphology
Chapter 4
Chapter 4 Exx: 2, 4, 13, 14, 19, 20 due 5/1
 Problem Set 3 due 5/6
MIDTERM is Tuesday 5/6!
Morphology
Slide
1
Ch 4 Morphology
Morphology
 The part of the grammar that is concerned with words and word formation
 Lexicon - your mental dictionary - the filing cabinet drawer for how words
are put together and what the meanings of these different parts are
 Word - the smallest free form found in language (it does not have to occur
in fixed position with respect to other forms)
Morphology
Slide
2
Ch 4 Morphology
Morphology
 Morpheme - the smallest unit of language that carries information about
meaning or function (builder has 2 morphemes: build and -er)
 Simple words - contain only 1 morpheme
 Complex words - contain more than 1 morpheme
 Free morpheme - a morpheme that can be a word by itself
 Bound morpheme - a morpheme that must be attached to another element
Morphology
Slide
3
Ch 4 Morphology
Morphology
 Identifying Morphemes
A morpheme can carry info about meaning or function. Haunt cannot be
broken down into h + aunt because only aunt has meaning. Bats can be
broken down into 2 morphemes: bat + -s (where the 2nd morpheme means
more than one).
The meanings of individual morphemes should contribute to the overall
meaning of the word. pumpkin cannot be broken down into pump + kin
because the meaning of pumpkin has nothing to do with that.
A morpheme is not the same thing as a syllable. treat = 1 morpheme and
1 syllable; dracula = 1 morpheme and 3 syllables; -s (PLURAL) in
English = 1 morpheme and is not even 1 syllable.
Often during word formation, changes in pronunciation and/or spelling
occur. These do not affect a morpheme’s status as a morpheme.
scare + -y = scary (root = scare); scary + -er = scarier (root = scare)
Morphology
Practice
Ch 4 Morphology
4
Morphology Practice
WORD
# of Morphemes
FREE
BOUND
eraser
2
1
2
erase
wicked
valid
-er
1
2
2
5
invalid
walk
Jack
act
wicked
invalid (A)
invalid (N)
walked
Jack’s
reactivation
in-ed
-s
re-, -ive, -ate, -tion
Morphology
Practice
5
Ch 4 Morphology
Morphology Practice
How to solve morphology problems: isolate and identify all the morphemes in the data. To do
this, identify recurring strings of sounds and match them with recurring meanings.
Mende (Sierra Leone)
What is the morpheme
meaning ‘the’? -i
If [sale] means
‘proverb’, what is the
form for ‘the proverb’?
[salei]
If [kpindii] means ‘the
night’, what does
[kpindi] mean?
‘night’
Morphology
Practice
6
Ch 4 Morphology
Morphology Practice
How to solve morphology problems: isolate and identify all the morphemes in the data. To do
this, identify recurring strings of sounds and match them with recurring meanings.
Turkish slide - What morphemes mean
Morphology
Practice
8
Ch 4 Morphology
Morphology
Practice
8
Ch 4 Morphology
Morphology
Practice
9
Ch 4 Morphology
Morphology Practice
Turkish - What is the order of morphemes
ROOT
PLURAL POSSESSIVE
POSTPOSITION
Morphology
Practice
10
Ch 4 Morphology
Morphology Practice
Turkish handout - English/Turkish translation
Morphology
Slide
11
Ch 4 Morphology
Morphology
 Allomorphs - the variant forms of a morpheme
 English indefinite article has 2 allomorphs: a and an
English plural has 3 allomorphs - what are they? cats, dogs, horses
Morphology
Slide
12
Ch 4 Morphology
Morphology
 Word structure
 Root - the core of the word and carries the major component of meaning
 Lexical category - Noun (N), Adjective (A), Verb (V), Preposition (P)
 Affixes - general term for a morpheme that does not have a lexical category,
and is always bound
Base is the form to which an affix is attached (most cases it is the root)
Morphology
Practice
Ch 4 Morphology
13
Morphology Practice
ROOT
WORD
CATEGORY CATEGORY
adjective
noun
WORD
# of Morphemes
ROOT
kindnesses
3
kind
amazement
2
2
amaze
honest
V
A
N
A
3
2
3
3
love
tree
read
person
N
N
V
N
A
N
V
A
dishonest
lovelier
trees
rereads
impersonal
Morphology
Slide
Ch 4 Morphology
14
Morphology
 Word trees - (Af) means Affix
 Base is the thing that an affix affixes to (sometimes the root, sometimes not)

kindness
1) Identify the root
A
kindness
Morphology
Slide
Ch 4 Morphology
15
Morphology
 Word trees - (Af) means Affix
 Base is the thing that an affix affixes to (sometimes the root, sometimes not)

kindness
2) Attach the suffix and determine lexical category of the word
N
A
Af
kindness
Morphology
Slide
Ch 4 Morphology
16
Morphology
 Word trees - (Af) means Affix
 Base is the thing that an affix affixes to (sometimes the root, sometimes not)

kindnesses
1) Identify the root
A
kindnesses
Morphology
Slide
Ch 4 Morphology
17
Morphology
 Word trees - (Af) means Affix
 Base is the thing that an affix affixes to (sometimes the root, sometimes not)

kindness
2) Attach the 1st affix and determine lexical category of the word
N
A
Af
kindnesses
Morphology
Slide
Ch 4 Morphology
18
 Word trees - (Af) means Affix
 Base is the thing that an affix affixes to (sometimes the root, sometimes not)

kindness
3) Attach the 2nd affix to the new base and determine lexical category of the
N
resulting word
N
A
Af
Af
kindnesses
Morphology
Slide
19
Ch 4 Morphology
Morphology
 Affixes can be suffixes, prefixes or infixes
Infixes must be morphemes inserted into the root of the word, and not just
adding another prefix or suffix to an existing one
freakin’ as an infix: abso-freakin-lutely not *absolute-freakin-ly
a true English infix?
 Problems: some words that have an affix no longer allow the root to be a
free form - unkempt, inept, overwhelmed - any others?
 Some words appear to have affixes but are considered one morpheme receive, submit, permit (still formed with other affixes like they do have affixes
though - permission, reception)
Morphology
Slide
Ch 4 Morphology
20
Morphology
 Derivation - an affixational process that forms a word with a meaning
and/or category distinct from its base (see Table 4.6, p. 119)
 Complex derivations - when there are multiple affixes
 Structurally ambiguous words - unlockable
A
V
A
Af
Af V
unlockable
Af
A
V
Af
unlockable
Morphology
Slide
21
Ch 4 Morphology
Morphology
 Constraints on derivation - suffix -ant cannot affix to native English
words, only borrowed words from Latin (p. 121)
 Sometimes constraint is phonological - -en can only attach as a suffix to a
monosyllabic base ending in an obstruent.
Morphology
Slide
22
Ch 4 Morphology
Morphology
 2 different classes of affixes:
 Class 1 affix - triggers phonological changes in consonants or vowels of the
base (see Table 4.9, p. 127) - stress shifts (not talking about spelling)
 Class 2 affix - phonologically neutral, having no effect on base or stress of
resulting word (see Table 4.10, p. 127) (not talking about spelling)
 Usually, Class 2 affixes cannot come between Class 1 affixes and the root.
 *fearlessity, but ok fearlessness, relational, divisiveness
Morphology
Practice
Ch 4 Morphology
23
Morphology Practice
Draw a word tree for lovlier -- How many morphemes?
A
How many morphemes in ugly? 1
uglier? 2
A
N
Af
Af
love li er
Morphology
Slide
24
Ch 4 Morphology
Morphology
 Inflection - the modification of a word’s form to indicate grammatical
information of various sorts
 The base that inflectional forms are added to is sometimes called a stem
(like root for derivational affixation)
 This is different from derivation
Not all inflection is through affixes
Morphology
Slide
25
Ch 4 Morphology
English only has 8 inflectional suffixes! (memorize them)(Table 4.15, p. 132)
Nouns
Plural -s
the books
Possessive (genitive) -’s
John’s book
Verbs
3rd Person Singular (SG) nonpast -s
He works hard.
Progressive -ing
He is working.
Past tense -ed
He worked yesterday.
Past participle -en/-ed
He has worked/eaten.
Adjectives
Comparative -er
the smaller one
Superlative -est
the smallest one
Morphology
Slide
26
Ch 4 Morphology
Morphology
 There are many irregular forms in English that don’t use the affixation of
inflection as discussed. (go + PAST = goed? no, went)
 Inflection versus Derivation
Inflection does not change the grammatical category or the meaning of the word
to which it is affixed
 Derivation can change the category and does change the meaning (although still
related) (All English prefixes are derivation even though they do not change the
lexical category of the word)
 Derivational affixes have to occur closest to base. neighborhoods but not
*neighborshood
 Inflectional affixes can combine with nearly every possible word (plural -s) but
derivational affixes can combine with a more limited set (-ment) (Table 4.16, p.
130)
Morphology
Slide
Ch 4 Morphology
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Morphology
 Inflection versus Derivation
 Special case of -ing: There are 3 -ing affixes!
 1) Derivational: Verb + -ing = Noun - I watched the dancing in the room.
 2) Derivational: Verb + -ing = Adjective - The dancing frog
 3) Inflecitonal: Verb + -ing = Verb - The frog is dancing
Morphology
Slide
28
Ch 4 Morphology
Morphology
 Inflection - in English is usually marked with affixes (suffixes)
 Can also be marked through Internal Change - a process that substitutes
one nonmorphemic segment for another to mark a grammatical contrast
 Ablaut (vowel alterations): sing, sink, drive - sang, sank, drove OR feet and
geese from foot and goose - what about dive?
 Suppletion - replaces a morpheme with an entirely different morpheme in
order to indicate a grammatical contrast
 to be in English is made up of a few different forms not related to each other
through affixation or internal change: is, was, were, are, am, be
Morphology
Slide
29
Ch 4 Morphology
Morphology
INFLECTION
Reduplication - full or partial - the repetition of all or part of a word to
indicate a grammatical or semantic contrast
 See Table 4.19, p. 132 - Do we do this in English? ugly ugly
 Tone placement - different pitch to indicate different tense (Spanish has an
inflectional stress to indicate tense and person - hablo versus habló)
 Agreement – when one word is inflected to match a certain grammatical
properties of another word – number, person (Eng. 3rd Sing Present –s: he speaks
 Case - is a change in a word’s form to indicate its grammatical role (subject,
direct object, indirect object, etc.)
 He/his/him, I/mine/me
Accusative Genitive
Morphology
Slide
30
Ch 4 Morphology
Morphology
 Compounding - compound word is the combination of two already existing
words
 The right-most word determines the lexical category of the new compound
word (greenhouse is a noun because house is a noun although green is an
adjective) - the morpheme that determines the category is called the head
 Spelling is not consistent with how compounds are represented - high school,
high-school, highschool
Pronunciation differences between compound and A + N sequence (Table
4.11, p. 124) - blackbird versus black bird
 Inflectional suffixes can only be added to second form in compound (tense or
plural) so drop kicked but not *dropped kick
Morphology
Slide
31
Ch 4 Morphology
Morphology
 Compounds that you can build the meaning out of the two words are
endocentric - steamboat, airplane, bathtub
 Compounds that you cannot build the meaning out of the two words are
exocentric - redhead, redneck (not type of head or neck)
 See Table 4.13, p. 125 for more examples
 Compounds in other languages? Any examples? earworm in German
Morphology
Slide
32
Ch 4 Morphology
Morphology
Other morphological phenomena
 Cliticization - clitics must be attached to another word (host)
 I’m leaving now. - sometimes indicated in English with apostrophe
 They’re here now
 French - Jean t’aime
 Clitics are not like affixes because they belong to their own lexical category
(verb, noun, etc.) different from their host
Morphology
Slide
33
Ch 4 Morphology
Morphology
Other morphological phenomena - Word formation processes
Conversions - changing one word from one category to another without the
use of affixes (zero derivation) - invalid to invalid (Table 4.22, p. 135) stress
shift often occurs in English
 Clipping - the shortening of a longer form to derive a new form - fax, porn,
blog - why blog and not eblog?
 Blends - blends two words together - smog, brunch, absotively
 Backformation - reanalysis of possible affix to form backwards the root
into a new form (that didn’t really exist) burglar - burgle; editor - edit
Morphology
Slide
34
Ch 4 Morphology
Morphology
Other morphological phenomena - Word formation processes
 Acronyms - the pronunciation of letters - scuba, laser, NASA, NATO - not
abbreviation which is just pronouncing the letters - LA - if say [la], then
acronym – for fun: RAS syndrome
Initialism – just pronouncing the string of letters DC, LA
 Onomatopoeia - words created to sound like the thing they describe - zip,
buzz, hiss, sizzle - different words in diff langs for same sound - how does a
dog bark in French? Spanish? English?
 Coinage - the creation of a new word from scratch (not how much a person
is worth!) - Teflon, spandex - flig
Morphology
Practice
Ch 4 Morphology
35
Morphology Practice
Identify the word formation process
blending
infomercial
(to) ship
mice
chirp
healthy
demo
better
conversion
inflection (internal change)
onomatopoeia
derivation
clipping
inflection (suppletion)
he’s
cliticization
headline
compounding
enthuse
back formation
Morphology
Slide
36
Ch 4 Morphology
Morphology
Morphology
Slide
37
Ch 4 Morphology
Morphology
Morphology
Practice
Ch 4 Morphology
38
Morphology Practice
Morphophonemics
Ch 4 Morphology
Midterm on Tuesday!
Have a safe and happy Halloween!