Friday, November 8, 2019
Definition and Examples of Inflectional Morpheme
Definition and Examples of Inflectional Morpheme In English morphology, an inflectional morpheme isà a suffix thats added to a wordà (a noun, verb, adjective or an adverb) to assign a particular grammatical property to that word, such as itsà tense, number, possession, or comparison. Inflectional morphemes in English include theà bound morphemesà -s (or -es); s (or s); -ed; -en; -er; -est; and -ing. These suffixes may even do double- or triple-duty. For example, - s can note possession (in conjunction with an apostrophe in the proper place), can make count nouns plural, or can put a verb in the third-person singular tense. The suffix -ed can make past participles or past-tense verbs.à Kristin Denham and Anne Lobeck, authors of Linguistics for Everyone, explainà why theres overlap:à This lack of distinction in form dates back to theà Middle Englishà period (1100ââ¬â1500 CE),à when the more complex inflectional affixes found inà Old Englishà were slowly dropping out of the language.(Wadsworth, 2010) Contrast With Derivational Morphemes Unlike derivational morphemes, inflectional morphemesà do not change the essential meaning or theà grammatical category of a word. Adjectives stay adjectives, nouns remain nouns, and verbs stay verbs. For example, if you add an -s to the noun carrot to show plurality, carrot remains a noun. If you add -ed to the verb walk to show past tense, walked is still a verb. George Yule explains it this way: The difference betweenà derivationalà and inflectional morphemes is worth emphasizing. An inflectional morpheme never changes theà grammatical categoryà of a word. For example, bothà oldà andà olderà are adjectives. Theà -erà inflection here (fromà Old Englishà -ra) simply creates a different version of the adjective. However, a derivational morpheme can change the grammatical category of a word. The verbà teachà becomes the nounà teacherà if we add the derivational morphemeà -erà (from Old Englishà -ere). So, the suffixà -erà inà modern Englishà can be an inflectional morpheme as part of an adjective and also a distinct derivational morpheme as part of a noun. Just because they look the same (-er) doesnt mean they do the same kind of work.à (The Study of Language, 3rd ed. Cambridge University Press, 2006) Placement Order When building words with multiple suffixes, there are rules in English that govern which order they go in.à In this example, the suffix is making a word into a comparative: Whenever thereà isà a derivational suffix and an inflectional suffix attached to the same word, they always appear in that order. First the derivational (-er) is attached toà teach, then the inflectional (-s) is added to produceà teachers. (George Yule, The Study of Language, 3rd ed. Cambridge University Press, 2006) Linguistics for Everyone lists additional examples to drive home the point about placement order of the affixes: For example, the wordsà antidisestablishmentarianismà andà uncompartmentalizeà each contain a number of derivational affixes, and any inflectional affixes must occur at the end:à antidisestablishmentarianismsà andà uncompartmentalized. (Kristin Denham and Anne Lobeck. Wadsworth, 2010) The study of this process of forming words is calledà inflectional morphology.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.