-
within a word. Many
words are
themselves standalone morphemes,
while other words contain multiple morphemes; in
linguistic terminology, this is the distinction...
-
structure of
words in
terms of
morphemes,
which are the
smallest units in a
language with some
independent meaning.
Morphemes include roots that can exist...
-
contain two free
morphemes (chair and man) are
referred to as
compound words.
Cranberry morphemes are a
special form of
bound morpheme whose independent...
- for analysis, by
contrasting null
morphemes with
alternatives that do have some
phonetic realization. The null
morpheme is
represented as
either the figure...
- is a type of
language that
primarily forms words by
stringing together morphemes (word parts)—each
typically representing a
single grammatical meaning—without...
- has two
obvious unbound morphemes ("black" + "berry"), and to
loganberry and boysenberry, both of
which have
first morphemes derived from
surnames (James...
-
contains both one or more free
morphemes (a unit of
meaning which can
stand by
itself as a word), and one or more
bound morphemes (a unit of
meaning which cannot...
- and lexicalization, i.e., to
capture the
phenomena that
result in new
morphemes via reanalysis, fusion, coalescence,
univerbation etc.). In
addition to...
- parameters:
morpheme per word
ratio (how many
morphemes there are per word)
degree of
fusion between morphemes (how
separable the
inflectional morphemes of words...
- All of them are
bound morphemes by definition;
prefixes and
suffixes may be
separable affixes.
Changing a word by
adding a
morpheme at its
beginning is...