SUMMARY OF O GRADY’S BOOK MORPHOLOGY: THE ANALYSIS OF WORD STRUCTURE

SUMMARY OF O GRADY’S BOOK

 MORPHOLOGY: THE ANALYSIS OF WORD STRUCTURE

IFTI LUTHVIANA


1.      WORDS AND WORD STRUCTURE

1.1  Morphemes

The smallest unit that carries information about meaning or function.

e.g. The word ‘builder’ consists of two morphemes: ‘build’ and ‘er’.

e.g. The word “demagnetization” has 4 morphemes : de-magnet-iz-ation

 

Free and bound morphemes

Free       : A morpheme whose form can be a word by itself. E.g. boy           

Bound   : A morpheme that must be attached to another element. E.g. boy added by  plural –s become boys

Allomorph

The variant forms of a morpheme

e.g. using plural morpheme –s : cats, dogs, judges

 

1.2  Representing Word Structure

Roots and affixes

Complex words often consist of a root and one or more affixes. Root constitutes the core of the word and carries the major component of its meaning. The lexical category is usually noun (N), verb (V), and adjective (A). Affixes do not belong to a lexical category and are always bound morphemes.

e.g. tree diagram

Text Box:   N
V                  Af
Teach              er

 

 

 

 

 


Base

The element to which an affix is added. E.g. ‘blackened’, blacken (verbal base) + -ed ‘black’ (root) + suffix –en.

1.3  Some Common Morphological Phenomena

Affixation

An extremely common morphological process in language

Prefix       : An affix that is attached to the front of its base. E.g. replay

Suffix      : An affix that is attached to the end of its base. E.g. kindness

Infixes     : An affix that occurs within a base. E. g. gumuyu

 

Cliticization

Clitics      : short unstressed forms that are pronounced together with another element as if the two were a single unit

Enclitics   : clitics that are attached to the end of a preceding word

Proclitics  : attach to the beginning of a following word

E.g. ‘m’ for ‘am’, ‘s’ for is, and ‘re’ for ‘are’. The dog's lying on the couch again.

 

Internal change

Process that substitutes one non-morphemic segment for another to mark a grammatical contrast. E.g. sing-sang, sink-sank.

Ablaut      :often used for vowel alternations that mark grammatical contrasts in this way.

Umlaut    : which involves the fronting of a vowel under the influence of a front vowel in the following syllable

 

Suppletion

Process that replaces a morph by an entirely different morph in order to indicate a grammatical contrast. E.g. go – went, be- was, were

 

Stress and tone placement

A base can undergo a change in the placement of stress or tone to reflect a change in its category. E.g. implant – implant, import – import

 

Reduplication

Duplicates all or part of the base to which it applies to mark a grammatical or semantic contrast. E.g. anak 'child' - anak anak 'all sorts of children'

 

Compounding

The combination of lexical categories (nouns, adjectives, verbs, or prepositions) to create a larger word.

Noun+ noun               : street light, campsite, bookcase

Adjective + noun       : bluebird, happy hour, high chair

Verb + noun               : swear word, washcloth,

Preposition + noun     : outhouse, overlord, in-group

 

 

2.      DERIVATION

2.1  English Derivational Affixes

Derivation forms a word with meaning and/or category distinct from that of its base through the addition of an affix. An affix combines with a base of a particular type to give a new word.

e.g.

- able                 V → A       fix-able, do-able, understand-able

- ment                V → N       adjourn-ment, treat-ment, amaze-ment

dis-                    V → V       dis-continue, dis-obey

in-                      A → A       in-competent, in-complete

others: -ant, -er, -ive, -ment, -ful, -al, -an, -ic, -ize, -less, -ous, -ate, -en, -ity, -ly, -ness,

anti-, de-, dis-, ex-, in-, mis-, re-, un-

 

 

 

 

 

 

2.2  Derivation at Work

Complex derivations

 

Constraints on derivation

Derivation does not usually apply freely to all members of a given category. For instance, the suffix -ant can combine only with bases in defendant, assailant etc. This is why it cannot occur with bases such as fight and teach become fightant and teachant.

 

Two classes of derivational affixes (Advanced)

Typical Class 1 affixes     : affixes are characterized by the fact that they often trigger changes in the consonant or vowel segments of the base and may affect the assignment of stress. E.g. -ity, -y, -ive, -al, ize, -ious, -ion

Typical Class 2 affixes     : affixes tend to be phonologically neutral, having no effect on the segmental makeup of the base or on stress assignment. e.g. -ness, -less, -ful, -ly, -er, -ish

 

3.      COMPOUNDING

3.1  Types of Compounds

Endocentric compounds

Denotes the concept of the head (usually rightmost component).

E.g. airplane - 'a conveyance that travels through the air'

Plural involves making plural of head, even it is irregular

e.g. policeman – policemen

 

 

Exocentric compounds

Denotes something else.

e.g. redneck - (not a red neck, but a type of person)

       redhead - (not a red head, but a person with red hair)

       Walkman -

Plural usually involves standard ‘s’ plural marker on the end of the entire word.

e.g. Walkman ≠ type of men, but a type of portable radio

        plural ‘mans’ rather than *walkmen

 

4.      OTHER TYPES OF WORD FORMATION

4.1  Conversion

Process that assigns an already existing word to a new syntactic category. Even though it does not add an affix, conversion is often considered to be a type of derivation because of the change in category and meaning that it brings about.

e.g.

V derived from N→ ship (the package)

N derived from V → (a new) survey

V derived from A → better (the old record)

4.2  Clipping

Process that shortens a polysyllabic word by deleting one or more syllables.

e.g. prof for professor, phys-ed for physical education, poli-sci for political science, and burger for hamburger.

 

4.3  Blends

Created from nonmorphemic parts of two already existing items.

E.g. brunch from breakfast and lunch

        smog form smoke and fog

        spam from spiced and ham

       telethon from telephone and marathon

4.4  Backformation

Process that creates a new word b y removing a real or supposed affix from another word in the language.

e.g. resurrect from resurrection

       housekeep from housekeeper

       enthuse from enthusiasm

4.5  Acronyms

Formed by taking the initial letters of the words in a phrase or title and pronouncing them as a word.

e.g. UNICEF for United Nations International Children's Emergency Fund

      NASA for National Aeronautics and Space Administration

      NATO for North Atlantic Treaty Organization

4.6  Onomatopoeia

Words that have been created to sound like the thing that they name.

e.g. English            → cock-a doodle-doo

       Japanese          → kokekokko

       Tagalog           → kukaok

4.7 Manufacture or coinage

This phenomenon is especially common in cases where industry requires a new and attractive name for a product.

e.g. Kodak, Dacron, Orion, and Teflon

 

5.      INFLECTION

Morphology used to indicate the grammatical subclass to which it belongs. The base to which an inflectional affix is added is sometimes called a stem.

 

5.1  Inflection versus Derivation

Category change       : Inflection does not change either the grammatical category or the type of meaning found in the word to which it applies.

                                   Derivational suffixes change the category and/or the type of meaning of the form to which they apply and create a new word.

Order                         : A derivational affix must combine with the base before an inflectional affix does. The derivational affix must be closer to the root, and inflection takes place after derivation.

Productivity              : the relative freedom with which they can combine with bases of the appropriate category. Inflectional affixes typically have relatively few exceptions. Derivational affixes characteristically apply to restricted classes of bases.

 

5.2  English Inflectional Affixes

Noun                                        Examples

Plural -s                                the books

Possessive -'s                        John’s book

Verbs                                      

3rd person sing. nonpast -s John reads well.

Progressive -ing                    He is working.

Past tense –ed                      He worked

Past participle -en/-ed          He has eaten/finished

Adjectives                               

Comparative –er                   the smaller one

Superlative –est                    the smallest one

 

Regular

·         Response time is independent of frequency.

·         No need to ‘look up’ the mental dictionary and all verbs can be handled with equal speed

Irregular

·         There is a correlation between response time and frequency of the verb.

·         It takes less time to give the past form of frequent verbs because it takes longer to locate in frequently used forms in one’s memory.

 

 

6.      FURTHER EXAMPLES OF INFLECTION

6.1  Number

Number is the morphological category that expresses contrasts involving countable quantities. The simplest number contrast consists of a two-way distinction between singular (one) and plural (more than one).

6.2  Noun Class

Some languages divide nouns into two o r more inflectional classes, based on shared

phonological and/or semantic properties. Noun class can be marked in a variety of ways. In some languages, the determiner is inflected to indicate the class of the noun. For example, singular nouns in French take the definite determiner le if masculine but la if feminine.

6.3  Case

A category that encodes information about an element's grammatical role (subject, direct object, and so on). In Modern English, this information is expressed largely through word order and the use of prepositions.

Ergative case marking

Ergative           : The case associated with the subject of the transitive verb

Absolutive       : The case associated with the direct object

 

English nouns and pronouns

Neither nouns nor determiners are inflected to distinguish grammatical relations such as subject and direct object. Pronouns exhibit a more elaborate set of contrasts, distinguishing a nominative (I, they, he), an accusative (me, them, him), and a genitive (my, their, his).

 

6.4  Person and Number Agreement

Person : a category that typically distinguishes among the first person (the speaker), the second person (the addressee), and the third person (anyone else).

In many languages, the verb is marked for both the person and number (singular or plural) of the subject. When one category is inflected for properties (such as person and number) of another, the first category is said to agree with the second.

 

6.5 Tense

The category that encodes the time of an event with reference to the moment of speaking.

Tenses in English makes two-way contrast between past (marked by the inflectional suffix -ed in regular verbs) and the nonpast (unmarked). Nonpast consists of future and present.

 

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