Lecture 2
Lecture 2
Lecture 2
Morphology as part of grammatical theory faces the two segmental units: the morpheme and the word.
The morpheme is a meaningful segmental component of the word; the morpheme is formed by phonemes; as
a meaningful component of the word it is elementary (i.e. indivisible into smaller segments as regards its
significative function). Usually it is designated in braces - {}. For example, sawed, sawn, sawing, and saws
can be analyzed into the morphemes {saw} + {-ed}, {-n}, {-ing}, {-s}, respectively.
In traditional grammar the study of the morphemic structure of the word was conducted in the light of the
two basic criteria: positional (the location of the marginal morphemes in relation to the central ones) and
semantic or functional (the correlative contribution of the morphemes to the general meaning of the word).
The combination of these two criteria in an integral description has led to the rational classification of
morphemes that is widely used both in research linguistic work and in practical lingual tuition.
Derivational morphology, on the other hand, creates new words from old ones: the core meaning might
change significantly, and the resulting word will still require additional inflectional morphology appropriate
to the context in which it is used. For example, walk and walker have fundamentally distinct (though, of
course, related) meanings: one is an action, the other is a person (or a device to aid a person).
Basic properties:
- change the part of speech (noun, verb, etc.) or the basic meaning of a word: -ment added to a verb
forms a noun (judg-ment)
- are not required by syntactic relations outside the word: un-kind combines un- and kind into a
single new word, but has no particular syntactic connections outside the word
- are often not productive or regular in form or meaning -- derivational morphemes can be selective
about what they'll combine with, and may also have erratic effects on meaning: the suffix -hood
occurs with just a few nouns such as brother, neighbour, and knight, but not with most others.
some derivational affixes, though, are quite regular in form and meaning, e.g. -ism.
- typically occur "inside" any inflectional affixes (i.e. closer to the root): in governments, -ment, a
derivational suffix, precedes -s, an inflectional suffix.
- in English, they may appear either as prefixes (pre-arrange), suffixes (arrange-ment) or no
change at all (conversion) (as in saw (verb) and saw (noun)). It can also involve a change in the
position of stress (per'mit (verb) - 'permit (noun)).
A list of English derivational morphemes appears as Appendix A.
Keep in mind that most morphemes are neither derivational nor inflectional! For instance, the English
morphemes Joe, twist, tele-, and ouch.
One and the same morphemic segment of functional (i.e. non-notional) status, depending on various
morphemic environments, can in principle be used now as an affix (mostly, a prefix), now as a root. Cf.:
out —a root-word (preposition, adverb, verbal postposition, adjective, noun, verb);
throughout — a composite word, in which -out serves as one of the roots (the categorial status of the
meaning of both morphemes is the same);
outing — a two-morpheme word, in which out is a root, and -ing is a suffix;
outlook, outline, outrage, out-talk, etc. — words, in which out- serves as a prefix;
look-out, knock-out, shut-out, time-out, etc. — words (nouns), in which -out serves as a suffix.
Abstract complete morphemic model of the common English word:
prefix + root + lexical suffix + grammatical suffix
The syntagmatic connections of the morphemes within the model form two types of hierarchical
structure. The first is characterised by the original prefixal stem (e.g. prefabricated), the second is
characterised by the original suffixal stem (e.g. inheritors). If we use the symbols St for stem, R for root, Pr
for prefix, L for lexical suffix, Gr for grammatical suffix, and, besides, employ three graphical symbols of
hierarchical grouping — braces, brackets, and parentheses, then the two morphemic word-structures can be
presented as follows:
W1 = {[Pr + (R + L)] +Gr};
W2 = {[(Pr + R) +L] + Gr}
Consider the example unusable. It contains three morphemes: prefix un- ; verb stem use; suffix –able.
What is the morphemic structure?
Is it first use + able to make usable, then combined with un- to make unusable?
Or is it first un + use to make unuse, then combined with -able to make unusable?
Since unuse doesn't exist in English, while usable does, the first structure is correct.
A
/\
/ A
/ /\
un use able
This analysis is supported by the general behaviour of these affixes. As we saw, there is a prefix un- that
attaches to adjectives to make adjectives with a negative meaning (unhurt, untrue, etc.). And there is a suffix
-able that attaches to verbs and forms adjectives (believable, fixable, readable). This gives us the analysis
pictured above. There is no way to combine a prefix un- directly with the verb use, so the other logically
possible structure won't work.
Now let's consider the word unlockable. This also consists of three morphemes: prefix un-; verb stem
lock; suffix -able
This time, though, a little thought shows us that there are two different meanings for this word. One is
"not lockable," as with a box that simply has no latch on it: Don't store your money in that box, it's
unlockable.
A
/\
/ A
/ /\
un lock able
The second meaning is "able to be unlocked," in contrast with something that can't be unlocked because
it's rusted shut or the key is missing: Now that we have the right key, the box is finally unlockable.
A
/\
V \
/\ \
un lock able
These two structures permit us to account for the two senses of unlockable.
We can combine the suffix -able with the verb lock to form an adjective lockable, and then combine the
prefix un- with lockable to make a new adjective unlockable, meaning "not able to be locked".
Or we can combine the prefix un- with the verb lock to form a new verb unlock, and the combine the
suffix -able with unlock to form an adjective unlockable, meaning "able to be unlocked".
By making explicit the different possible hierarchies for a single word, we can better understand why its
meaning might be ambiguous. Because use is not a verb that effects a change, it cannot form the derived
word *unuse. So unusable must be based on usable, and therefore is not ambiguous.
Morphemes can also be divided on a roughly semantic basis into categories of content and function
morphemes, a distinction that is conceptually distinct from the free/bound distinction but partially overlaps
with it in practice.
The idea behind this distinction is as follows: some morphemes express some general sort of referential
or informational content, a meaning that is essentially independent of the grammatical system of a particular
language, other morphemes are heavily tied to a grammatical function, expressing syntactic relationships
between units in a sentence, or obligatorily marked categories such as number or tense.
Thus (the stems of) nouns, verbs and adjectives are typically content morphemes: throw, green, Chris,
sand are all English content morphemes. ontent morphemes are also often called open-class morphemes,
because they belong to categories that are open to the addition of arbitrary new items. People are always
making up or borrowing new morphemes in these categories: smurf, nuke, byte, grok, chalupa, baathist.
By contrast, the following are typically function morphemes: prepositions: to, by, from, with; articles:
the, a; pronouns: she, his, my; conjunctions: and, but, although; affixes: re-, -ness, -ly. Such morphemes
either serve to tie elements together grammatically or to express morphological features such as definiteness
that may be required in a particular language. Function morphemes are also called "closed-class"
morphemes, because they belong to categories that are essentially closed to invention or borrowing -- it is
very difficult to add a new preposition, article or pronoun.
For example, for years, some people have tried to introduce non-gendered pronouns into English, for
instance sie (meaning either "he" or "she", but not "it"), but have had essentially zero success. This is much
harder to do than to get people to adopt a new noun or verb, due to the basic distinction between open and
closed class morphemes: the pronouns are part of a limited system, whereas normal nouns are a long list to
which items can easily be added.
Morphological changes
Internal changes
A range of morphological processes involve not the addition of some element (such as a suffix) but rather
some change in the stem.
In English, some irregular inflections involve internal changes of this type -- for example, the past tense
and past participle. Many verbs, such as wear / wore / worn, show a combination of pure internal change (for
the past tense) and irregular suffixation (for the past participle). A small number of noun plurals also have
internal changes.
Category-changing derivation
Some derivational affixes that create new words also happen to preserve the syntactic category.
-DOM added to a noun creates a noun: king, king-dom; -STER added to a noun similarly creates a noun:
gang, gang-ster.
But -dom can also be added to other parts of speech, as in freedom and boredom; and -ster can be added
to verbs, as in spinster; in all cases the result is a noun, in which case the part of speech may change.
Lexicalization
Because the words that result from a derivational process are new words, different from the original
word, they can take on a life of their own. This process is often termed lexicalization, which essentially
refers to becoming an independent word.
dis+comfort means essentially "lack of comfort"
but dis+ease no longer means simply "lack of ease"
quick+ly means "in a quick manner"
but fair+ly most often means "to a moderate degree" (originally from an older meaning of fair), e.g.
fairly expensive doesn't mean "expensive in a way that I consider fair"!
It's because derivation creates new words that this lexicalization is possible. Clearly, speakers of a
language must memorize them as independent words with potentially independent meanings. You don't find
this sort of lexicalization with inflectional morphology: walked can't refer to a different kind of movement
than walks. That's not surprising if these are both forms of the same word WALK, with a single basic
meaning. he only time this happens with inflectional morphology is when older, irregular forms can take on
a special meaning after they've been replaced by a new, typically regular form. Here are some examples in
English.
basic word regular inflection old, irregular inflection
brother brothers brethren
old older elder
late latest last
bereave bereaved bereft
Regularization
A type of morphological change that affects both inflectional and derivational morphemes is
regularization.
Children learning a language often regularize forms that don't follow the general pattern, e.g. goed. Over
time irregularities tend to be eliminated, even in adult speech, or if retained they shift to a more limited
function as brethren did.
For example, some irregular verb forms have been abandoned today, but were used by Shakespeare, in
what is termed Early Modern English.
crew as the past tense of crow, now regular crowed, which is also found (in one use, as a past participle)
It was about to speak, when the cock crew.
Bernardo, Hamlet, Prince of Denmark, Act 1, Scene 1
My lord, I did;
But answer made it none: yet once methought
It lifted up its head and did address
Itself to motion, like as it would speak;
But even then the morning cock crew loud,
And at the sound it shrunk in haste away,
And vanish'd from our sight.
Horatio, Hamlet, Prince of Denmark, Act 1, Scene 2
Reduplication
A special kind of affixation involves the repetition of all or part of the root and is known as reduplication.
Reduplication is widespread in English derivation, for example, ack-ack. It often involves modification of a
part of the base, as in raggle-taggle, but may also be total, without changes of the root. As with other forms
of affixation, reduplication may not only be initial in roots but also medial or final, for example ping-pong,
marry-shmarry.
APPENDIX A
ENGLISH DERIVATIONAL MORPHEMES
(ADAPTED FROM BAUER)
PREFIXES
Class /category changing a-typical Ex-orbital
a-blaze Adj<V cis-lunar
Verb or Adjective
be-calm V<Adj extra-sensory
be-friend V<N Circum-navigate
Noun or Verb
en-tomb V<N Circum-polar
Fore-tell
Noun, Verb, or Adjective
Class maintaining Fore-ground
Re-arrangement Counter-culture
Nouns Counter-demonstrate
Mis-lead
Mini-dress Mis-fortune Counter-intuitive
Step-father Dis-information
Noun or Adjective
Mal-nutrition Dis-ambiguate
In-definite Co-author
Verbs
Mid-morning Inter-mix
De-escalate Mid-Victorian Sub-let
Ex-president Sub-conscious
Adjectives
SUFFIXES
Deriving Nouns -ce dependen-ce -ly friend-ly
-ness good-ness -ous venom-ous
from Nouns
-dom free-dom -y catt-y
-dom king-dom
-er six-er
-ess lion-ess from Verbs
-hood false-hood
-iana Victor-iana -able believ-able
-ist social-ist
-er Birch-er -less count-less
-th warm-th
-ette kitchen-ette -ant/-ent absorb-ent
-hood man-hood Deriving Verbs -atory affirm-atory
-ism absentee-ism -ful resent-ful
from Nouns
-let stream-let -ive generat-ive
-ify metr-ify
-ling duck-ling
-ize Cambodia-ize from Adjectives
-scape sea-scape
-ish green-ish
-ship kin-ship from Adjectives
-ly good-ly
-en short-en
from Verbs
Deriving Adverbs
-ation especially with -ize: Deriving Adjectives
category-iz-ation -ly slow-ly
from Nouns
-ee blackmail-ee -ward(s) in-ward(s)
-al education-al (allomorphs:
-ure clos-ure -wise length-wise
-ial, -ual: presidential, habitual)
-al arrive-al -esque picture-esque
-ary dispens-ary -less clue-less Miscellaneous
-er kill-er -ate passion-ate
-ment manage-ment Iff-y, upp-itty
-en wood-en
Down-er
from Adjectives -ese Peking-ese
In-ness, much-ness, such-ness,
-ity divin-ity -ful doubt-ful
there-ness, why-ness
-cy excellen-cy -ic algebra-ic Thus-ly