A. Definition of Morphology and Morphemes
A word Morphology is from Greece “morphe “that has meaning “forms”. It means the morphology is a science of language that focuses on language and how that language special word formed.Morphology is the study of the basic building blocks of meaning in language. Morphology is the study of how words are put together or “shaped” by using morphemes, which include prefixes, roots, and suffixes.
Knowing the different morphemes in a word allows one to not only figure out its definition, but also determine whether it’s a noun, verb, or adjective. The words morphology and morpheme both come from the Greek root word morph meaning “shape;” morphology is therefore the study of the “shape” words take, whereas morphemes are those building blocks which “shape” the word.
These building blocks, called morphemes, are the smallest units of form that bear meaning or have a grammatical function.A morpheme can be defined as a minimal unit having more or less constantmeaning and more of less constant form. For example, linguists say that the word buyers is made up of three morphemes{buy} +{er} +{s}. The evidence for this is that each can occur in other combinationsof morphemes without changing its meaning. We can find {buy} in buying, buys, and {er} in seller, fisher, as well as buyer. And {s} can be found in boys, girls, anddogs. The more combinations a morpheme is found in, the more productive it is said tobe.
B.
Kinds of Morphemes
1.
Free Morphemes
Free morphemes are those that can stand alone as words. They may be lexical
morphemes ({serve}, {press}), or grammatical morphemes ({at}, {and}).
A morpheme is free if it is able to appear as a word by itself. It is bound if it can only appear as part of
a larger, multi-morphemic word. Every morpheme is either free or bound. Free
morphemes are also referred as roots.
2.
Bound Morphemes
Bound morphemes can occur only in combination—they are parts of a word. They may be
lexical morphemes (such as {clued} as in include, exclude, preclude)
or they may be grammatical (such as {PLU} = plural as in boys, girls,
and cats).
Bound morphemes are also referred to as affixes, among which there are prefixes, infixes, and suffixes.
Lexical and Grammatical Morphemes
Lexical morphemes are those that having meaning by themselves
(moreaccurately, they have sense).
Grammatical morphemes specify a relationshipbetween other morphemes. But the
distinction is not all that well defined.Nouns, verbs, adjectives ({boy},
{buy}, {big}) are typical lexical morphemes.Prepositions, articles,
conjunctions ({of}, {the}, {but}) are grammatical morphemes.
C.
Roots and Affixes
1) Root Words (also called stems)
A root is the
irreducible core of a Word, with absolutely nothing else attached to it. It is
the part that is always present, possibly with some modification, in the various manifestations of a lexical. Many words contain a
root standing on its own. Roots which are capable of standing independently are
called free morphemes.
Root
|
Stem
|
Non-affix lexical content morphemes that
cannot be analyzed into smaller parts (ex.) cran (as in cranberry),
act, beauty, system, etc.
·
Free Root Morpheme: run bottle, phone, etc.
·
Bound Root Morpheme: receive, remit, uncouth,
nonchalant, etc.
|
·
When a root morpheme is combined with affix
morphemes, it forms a stem.
·
Other affixes can be added to a stem to form
a more complex stem.
|
Complex words consist of a root and one or more
affixes. A root is a content morpheme that cannot be analyzed into smaller
parts. Seen another way, the root is what's left when all prefixes and suffixes
have been removed. Some examples are paint in painter, read in reread, and ling
in linguistic. A root may or may not be a standalone word (ling isn't). Root
words can be combined with prefixes and suffixes to create new words. In
this basic course, the words "root" and "stem" are used
interchangeably because, while not identical, they are linguistically similar
in meaning.
2)
Affixes
(prefixes, suffixes, infixes, and circumfixes)
Affixes are bound morphemes (meaning they cannot stand alone like words can) that we add to
free morphemes to create new words. This is the
four kinds of affixes with examples from languages of the world.
Prefixes
|
Suffixes
|
Infixes
|
Circumfixes
|
Bound
morphemes which occur only before other morphemes.
Examples: un- (uncover, undo) dis-(displeased, disconnect), pre- (predetermine, prejudge) |
Bound
morphemes which occur following other morphemes.
Examples: -er (singer, performer) -ist (typist, pianist) -ly (manly, friendly) |
Bound
morphemes which are inserted into other morphemes.
|
Bound
morphemes that are attached to a root or stem morpheme both initially and
finally.
|
a. Prefixes
Morphemes are the minimal units of meaning in
all languages, and many languages have prefixes and suffixes. But languages may
differ in how they deploy their morphemes. A morpheme that is a prefix in one language
may be a suffix in another language.
Prefix is a letter or group of letters attached to the beginning of word
that party indicates its meaning. For example, the word prefix itself begins
with a prefix-pre, with generally means before. Understanding of the common
prefixes can help deduce the meaning of new words that we encounter. However,
some of prefixes (such as in-) have more than one meaning. Agusmortoyo et al
(2012: 3-4)
Prefix
|
Meaning
|
Example
|
a, an
|
Without
|
Amoral
|
Ante
|
Before
|
Antecedent
|
Anti
|
Against
|
Anticlimax
|
Auto
|
Self
|
Autopilot
|
Circum
|
around
|
Circumvent
|
Co
|
with
|
Copilot
|
Com
Con
|
with
|
Companion, contact
|
Contra
|
Against
|
Contradict
|
De
|
Off, away from
|
Devalue
|
Dis
|
Not
|
Disappear
|
b. Sufixes
Suffix is a letter or a group of letters attached to the end of a word to form a new word or to alter the grammatical function of the original word. For example, the verb read can be made into the noun reader by adding the suffix –er; read can be made into the adjective by adding the suffix – able. Agusmortoyo et al (2012: 3-4)
Suffix
|
Meaning
|
Example
|
-acy
|
State or quality
|
Privacy
|
-al
|
Act or process of
|
Refusal
|
-ance, ence
|
State or quality of
|
Maintenance, eminence
|
-dom
|
Place or state of being
|
Freedom, kingdom
|
-er, -or
|
One who
|
Trainer, protector
|
-ism
|
Doctrine, belief
|
Communism
|
-ist
|
One who
|
Chemist
|
Ity,-ty
|
Quality of
|
Veracity
|
-ment
|
Condition of
|
Argument
|
-ness
|
State of being
|
Heaviness
|
-ship
|
Position held
|
Fellowship
|
-sion, -tion
|
State of being
|
Concession, transition
|
c. Infixes
Some languages also have infixes, morphemes that are inserted into
other morphemes. An infix is an
affix inserted into the root itself. Infixes are very common in Semitic
language like Arabic and Hebrew. But infixing is somewhere rare in English. Slat
and Taylor (1978) suggest that the only infix that occurs in English morphology
is /-n-/ which is inserted before the last consonant of the root in a few
words of Latin origin, on what appears to be an arbitrary basis.
In fact, in fixation of sorts still happens in contemporary English.
Example:
-
Kalamazu (places
name) → Kalama-goddam-zoo
Instantiate
(verb) →
in-fuckin-stantiate
-
Kangaroo →
kanga-bloody-roo
Impossible →
in-fuckin-possible
Guarantee →
guaran-friggin-tee
(Recall that the arrow → means “becomes” or is “re-written as”.)
As you can see, in present-day English in fixation, not of an affix
morpheme but of an entire word (which may have more than one
morpheme, blood-y, fuck-ing) is actively used to form words. Curiously,
this infixation is virtually restricted to inserting expletives into words in
expressive language that one would probably not use in polite company.
BontocIgorot, spoken
in the Philippines, uses infixes, as illustrated by the following:
Noun/Adjective
|
Verb
|
||
Fikas
|
"strong"
|
Fumikas
|
"to
be strong"
|
Kilad
|
"red"
|
Kumilad
|
"to
be red"
|
Ngitad
|
"dark"
|
Ngumitad
|
"to
be dark"
|
We have
infixes in English, too, but they tend to be infixed full-word obscenities into
another word, usually into adjectives or adverbs. The most common infix in
America is the word firkin' and all the euphemisms for it, such as friggin',
freakin', flippin', and bloody (and its euphemism, bloomin', British), as in un
+ fuckin' + believable and fan + funckin' + tastic, I'm not o +
fuckin' + kay(in the song, "I'm not Okay" by the group My
Chemical Romance.)
d. Circumfuses
Some languages have circumfuses, morphemes that
are attached to a base morpheme both initially and finally. In Chickasaw, a
Muskogean language spoken in Oklahoma, the negative is formed with both a
prefix ik- and the suffix -o. The final vowel of the affirmative is dropped
before the negative suffix is added. Examples of this circumfixing are:
Affirmative
|
Negative
|
||
Chokma
|
"his
is good"
|
ik +
chokm + o
|
"he
isn't good"
|
Lakna
|
"it
is yellow"
|
ik +
lakn + o
|
"it
isn't yellow"
|
D.
The Derivational and Inflection
There are two types of morpheme: free morpheme, and
bound morpheme. Free morpheme is then further divided into two: lexical and
functional morpheme. Bound morpheme is also further divided into two
categories: derivational and inflectional morpheme.
Derivational morpheme changes the root's class
of words or its meaning, or both. The word 'unhappy' derives from the root
happy added with a prefix un. Both 'happy' and 'unhappy' are adjectives. The
meaning, however, is totally different. "I am unhappy" is totally
different from "i am happy". in this case, the prefix un is called
derivational morpheme.
Inflectional morpheme, on the other hand, does
not change either the root's class of words or the meaning. the word 'books',
for example, derives from the root book added with a suffix –s. both 'book' and
'books' are noun. the meaning is still the same. the suffix –s only indicates
the plural form. in this case, the suffix –s is inflectional.
We can make a further distinction within the set of morphemes that
are both bound and grammatical. Bound grammatical morphemes (those that don’t
havea sense by themselves and, additionally, always occur in combinations)
arecommonly known as affixes. They
can be further divided into inflectionalaffixes
and derivational affixes.Here
is some of the evidence for the distinction between inflectional andderivational
affixes (the book has more):
Inflectional Affixes
|
Derivational Affixes
|
All are suffixes
|
May be either suffixes or prefixes
|
Have a wide range of application. E.g.
most English nouns can be made
plural, with {PLU}
|
May have a wide or narrow range
|
All native to English (since Old English
was spoken around 500-1000 AD)
|
Many were adopted from Latin, Greek,
or other languages. (Though others,
especially the suffixes, are native,
including {ful}, {like}, {ly}, and {AG})
|
1. Inflectional Affixes
Inflectional morphemes, on the other hand, do notchange
meanings or parts of speech, but instead simply make minor grammatical changes
necessary for agreement with other words.
Example: cats =cat + s
cooler =cool + er.
English has
only eight inflectional affixes:
2. {PLU} = plural Noun
–s boys
3. {POSS} = possessive Noun
-’s boy’s
4. {COMP} = comparative Adjective -er older
5. {SUP} = superlative Adjective -est oldest
6. {PRES} = present Verb
-s walks
7. {PAST} past Verb
-ed walked
8. {PAST PART} = past participle Verb
-en driven
9. {PRES PART} = present participle Verb
-ing driving
Notice that, as noted above, even irregular forms can be
representedmorphologically is using these morphemes. E.g. the irregular plural sheep
iswritten as {sheep} + {PLU}, even though the typically form of {PLU} is
not usedhere.
Similarly, better = {good} + {COMP}; drove = {drive}
+ {PAST}.
2. Derivational Affixes
Derivational morphemes create new words. Theyderive new words from other words.
Derivational change part of speech or the meaning of a word.
Example :
unhappy un + happy;
happiness happy + ness
preview pre + view.
There is an indefinite number of derivational morphemes.For
example, the following are some derivational suffixes:
{ize} attaches to a noun and turns it into a verb: rubberize
{ize} also attaches to an adjective and turns it into a verb: normalize
{ful} attaches to a noun and turns it into an adjective: playful,
helpful
{ly} attaches to an adjective and turns it into an adverb: grandly,
proudly
A different {ly} attaches to a noun and changes it into an
adjective: manly, friendly
English also has derivational prefixes, such as:{un}, {dis},
{a}, {anti}, all of which indicate some kind of negation: unhappy, dislike,
atypical, anti-aircraft.
Terima kasaih atas kunjungannya. semoga bermanfaat yaa.. ^_^