- or a root morpheme, in the
stricter sense, may be
thought of as a
monomorphemic stem. The
traditional definition allows roots to be
either free morphemes...
-
languages are
often contrasted with
isolating languages, in
which words are
monomorphemic, and
fusional languages, in
which words can be complex, but morphemes...
-
Confucian [kənˈfjʉʃən]. In some
Modern Scots varieties, also
before the
monomorphemic end-stresses
syllables /rd/, /r/ + any
voiced consonant, /ɡ/ and /dʒ/...
- root
beginning with that same vowel. It may also occur, rarely,
within monomorphemic words (words that
consist of only one morpheme) as a
result of the elision...
-
Morphological form cơm "cooked rice"
monosyllabic monomorphemic cù lao "island"
disyllabic monomorphemic dưa chuột/dưa leo "cu****ber"
disyllabic bimorphemic...
- on
patterns of
vowel elision, Adam
Falkenstein argued that
stress in
monomorphemic words tended to be on the
first syllable, and that the same applied...
-
morphologically complex that
others such as
William Stokoe would analyze as
monomorphemic, and many of his
findings were
later rediscovered. His
study of Plains...
- was a
close correspondence between a
character and a
monosyllabic and
monomorphemic word.
Although the
script is not alphabetic, the
majority of characters...
- of
Southern New
Guinea are
examples of the rare base 6
system with
monomorphemic words running up to 66.
Examples are
Kanum and Kómnzo. The Sko languages...
- is, was, I, for, on, you, … The most
common adpositions are single,
monomorphemic words.
According to the
ranking cited above, for example, the most common...