morphology

87
Morphology 1 1

Upload: garrison-fisher

Post on 04-Jan-2016

39 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

DESCRIPTION

Morphology. Morphology is the field within linguistics that studies the internal structure of words. a morpheme. the smallest unit of grammatical analysis. be identifiable from one word to another and Contribute in some way to the meaning of the whole word. MORPHEMES. inflectional - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Morphology

Morphology 1 1

Page 2: Morphology

Morphology 1 2

Morphology is the field within linguistics that studies the internal

structure of words.

Page 3: Morphology

Morphology 1 3

•the smallest unit of grammatical analysis.

a morpheme

Page 4: Morphology

Morphology 1 4

be identifiable from one word to another

and

Contribute in some way to the meaning of the whole word.

Page 5: Morphology

Morphology 1 5

MORPHEMES

derivational inflectional

work – work(-s)work – work (-ed)

paradigm

read + -erun- + tie

Page 6: Morphology

Morphology 1 6

A word and its forms: DERIVATION

Page 7: Morphology

Morphology 1 7

Derivationally related words are different words with a shared base.

We talk about so called word classes , primary grammatical categories, parts of speech or lexical categories:

Page 8: Morphology

Morphology 1 8

Why do we group words into categories?

Page 9: Morphology

Morphology 1 9

The lexicon (vocabulary) of language - much higher than a hundred thousand.

It is convenient not to study individual items but to group certain items into classes sharing certain features, and examine them together

Page 10: Morphology

Morphology 1 10

conversion (or zero derivation) word passing from one word

class to another (or several others) without taking any affix

Page 11: Morphology

Morphology 1 11

A word and its forms: INFLECTION

Page 12: Morphology

Morphology 1 12

(- s ), (- ed),(-er), are attached to words to indicate their grammatical functions, for example number, tense, degree, without involving a full semantic change (i.e. a change in meaning).

i n f l e x i o n a l morphemes. p a r a d i g m Inflectionally related word forms are the forms of

the same word A paradigm is the complete set of related word-

forms associated with a given lexeme

Page 13: Morphology

Morphology 1 13

LEXEME ?

Page 14: Morphology

Morphology 1 14

PERFORM This pianist performs in the local

hall every week. Mary told us that this pianist

performed in the local hall every week.

These pianists perform in the local hall every week.

Page 15: Morphology

Morphology 1 15

PERFORM = LEXEME=an abstract kind of word of which the word forms are all inflectional variants

Page 16: Morphology

Morphology 1 16

TELL is a lexeme of told (past tense of tell )

PIANIST is a lexeme of PIANISTS (plural of pianist)

Page 17: Morphology

Morphology 1 17

Inflection vs. word-formation

Page 18: Morphology

Morphology 1 18

inflectional rules - relate different forms of the same lexeme

word-formation - relate two different lexemes.

Page 19: Morphology

Morphology 1 19

word-formation:

derivation and compounding

Page 20: Morphology

Morphology 1 20

COMPOUNDS

Page 21: Morphology

Morphology 1 21

A compound is a word composed of more than one free morpheme.

Page 22: Morphology

Morphology 1 22

COMPOUND VERBS: COMPOUND ADJECTIVES COMPOUND NOUNS HEADED AND HEADLESS COMPOUNDS BLENDS AND ACRONYMS COMPOUNDS CONTAINING BOUND

COMBINING FORMS PHRASAL WORDS

Page 23: Morphology

Morphology 1 23

COMPOUND VERBS

Page 24: Morphology

Morphology 1 24

VERB_VERB (VV) stir-fry, freeze-dry NOUN –VERB (NV) hand-wash, air-condition , steam-clean ADJECITVE-VERB (AV) dry-clean, whitewash PREPOSITION-VERB (PV)

underestimate, outrun, overcook ADVERB-VERB (Ad-V) downsize, upgrade

Page 25: Morphology

Morphology 1 25

right-headed

Page 26: Morphology

Morphology 1 26

Blacklist

Page 27: Morphology

Morphology 1 27

collective meaning

Page 28: Morphology

Morphology 1 28

Hyphenation Unhyphenated,solid -compound

verbs with single-syllable modifiers overhang hyphenated - longer modifiers Air-condition

Page 29: Morphology

Morphology 1 29

COMPOUND ADJECTIVES are constructed in a very similar way to the

compound nouns a modifier of a noun It consists of two or more morphemes of which the

left-hand component limits or changes the modification of the right-hand one

"the dark-green dress": dark limits the green that modifies dress.

Page 30: Morphology

Morphology 1 30

NOUN-ADJECTIVE (NA)sky-high, coal-black, oil-rich

ADJECTIVE-ADJECTIVE (AA) grey-green, red-hot PREPOSITION-ADJECTIVE (PA) underfull, overactive

Page 31: Morphology

Morphology 1 31

VA structure, corresponding to the VV verbs would resemble hypothetical „sing-happy“ (happy enough to sing),

„fail-safe“ (designed to return to a safe condition if it fails or goes wrong).

They scarcely exist, even though it is easy enough to find plausible meanings for them.

This reflects the relative reluctance of verbs to participate in compounding generally in English.

All the compounds here are again right – headed.

Page 32: Morphology

Morphology 1 32

Solid compound adjectives earsplitting, eyecatching, and downtown.

(AmE) ear-splitting, eye-catching (BrE) Numbers that are spelled out and have

the suffix -fold added: "fifteenfold", "sixfold".

Points of the compass: northwest, northwester, northwesterly,

northwestwards, but not North-West Frontier.

Page 33: Morphology

Morphology 1 33

Hyphenated compound adjectives

A compound adjective is hyphenated if the hyphen helps the reader differentiate a compound adjective from two adjacent adjectives that each independently modify the noun.

Page 34: Morphology

Morphology 1 34

"acetic acid solution": a bitter solution producing vinegar or acetic acid (acetic + acid + solution)

"acetic-acid solution": a solution of acetic acid

Page 35: Morphology

Morphology 1 35

The hyphen is unneeded when capitalization or italicization makes grouping clear:

old English scholar: an old person who is English and a scholar, or an old scholar who studies English

"Old English scholar": a scholar of Old English.

"De facto proceedings" (not "de-facto")

Page 36: Morphology

Morphology 1 36

no risk of ambiguities - may be written without a hyphen:

Sunday morning walk.

Page 37: Morphology

Morphology 1 37

Hyphenated compound adjectives may have been formed originally by an adjective preceding a noun:

Round table" → "round-table discussion" "Blue sky" → "blue-sky law" "Red light" → "red-light district" "Four wheels" → "four-wheel drive" (the

singular, not the plural, is used)

Page 38: Morphology

Morphology 1 38

Others may have originated with a verb preceding an adjective or adverb:

"Feel good" → "feel-good factor" "Buy now, pay later" → "buy-now

pay-later purchase"

Page 39: Morphology

Morphology 1 39

others are created with an original verb preceding a preposition.

"Stick on" → "stick-on label" "Walk on" → "walk-on part" "Stand by" → "stand-by fare" "Roll on, roll off" → "roll-on roll-off

ferry"

Page 40: Morphology

Morphology 1 40

The following compound adjectives are always hyphenated when they are not written as one word:

Page 41: Morphology

Morphology 1 41

An adjective preceding a noun to which -d or -ed has been added as a past-participle construction, used before a noun: "loud-mouthed hooligan" "middle-aged lady" "rose-tinted glasses"

Page 42: Morphology

Morphology 1 42

A noun, adjective, or adverb preceding a present participle: "an awe-inspiring personality" "a long-lasting affair" "a far-reaching decision

Page 43: Morphology

Morphology 1 43

Numbers spelled out or as numerics: "seven-year itch" "five-sided polygon" "20th-century poem" "30-piece band" "tenth-storey window"

Page 44: Morphology

Morphology 1 44

A numeric with the affix -fold has a hyphen (15-fold), but when spelled out takes a solid construction (fifteenfold).

Page 45: Morphology

Morphology 1 45

Numbers, spelled out or numeric, with added -odd: sixteen-odd, 70-odd.

Compound adjectives with high- or low-: "high-level discussion", "low-price markup".

Colours in compounds: "a dark-blue sweater" "a reddish-orange dress".

Page 46: Morphology

Morphology 1 46

Fractions as modifiers are hyphenated: "five-eighths inches", but not in "a thirty-three thousandth part".

Fractions used as nouns have no hyphens: "I ate only one third of the pie."

Page 47: Morphology

Morphology 1 47

Comparatives and superlatives in compound adjectives also take hyphens: "the highest-placed competitor" "a shorter-term loan"

However, a construction with most is not hyphenated: "the most respected member".

Page 48: Morphology

Morphology 1 48

The following compound adjectives are not normally hyphenated:

Page 49: Morphology

Morphology 1 49

Where there is no risk of ambiguity: "a Sunday morning walk"

Left-hand components of a compound adjective that end in -ly that modify right-hand components that are past participles (ending in -ed): "a hotly disputed subject" "a greatly improved scheme" "a distantly related celebrity"

Page 50: Morphology

Morphology 1 50

Compound adjectives that include comparatives and superlatives with more, most, less or least: "a more recent development" "the most respected member" "a less opportune moment" "the least expected event"

Page 51: Morphology

Morphology 1 51

Ordinarily hyphenated compounds with intensive adverbs in front of adjectives: "very much admired classicist" "really well accepted proposal"

Page 52: Morphology

Morphology 1 52

COMPOUND NOUNS

Page 53: Morphology

Morphology 1 53

Verb- noun (VN): swearword, drophammer, playtime

Noun-noun (NN): hairnet, mosquito net, butterfly net, hair restorer

Adjective-noun (AN): blackboard, greenstone, faintheart

Preposition – noun (PN): in-group, outpost, overcoat

Page 54: Morphology

Morphology 1 54

Most of these are also right-headed.

Page 55: Morphology

Morphology 1 55

If we try to think of more examples for the four types, we will probably find the task easiest for the NN type.

In fact, almost any pair of nouns can be juxtaposed in English so as to form a compound or a phrase – provided that there is something that this compound or phrase could plausibly mean.

Page 56: Morphology

Morphology 1 56

Concatenating words without case markers

compounds - arbitrarily long. Short compounds - in three

different ways

Page 57: Morphology

Morphology 1 57

solid or closed : housewife, lawsuit, wallpaper, etc.

hyphenated form: compounds that contain affixes house-build(er),single-mind(ed)(ness), adjective-adjective compounds blue-green verb-verb compounds, freeze-dry compounds that contain articles, mother-of-pearl salt-and-pepper

Page 58: Morphology

Morphology 1 58

open or spaced form consisting of newer combinations of usually longer words, such as distance learning, player piano, lawn tennis, etc.

Page 59: Morphology

Morphology 1 59

container ship/container-ship/containership

and particle

board/particle-board/particleboard.

Page 60: Morphology

Morphology 1 60

two kinds of NN compound.

Page 61: Morphology

Morphology 1 61

hairnet mosquito net butterfly net hair restorer

Page 62: Morphology

Morphology 1 62

restorer in hair restorer is derived from a verb (restore).

Page 63: Morphology

Morphology 1 63

Verbs, unlike most nouns and adjectives, impose expectations and requirements on the noun phrases that accompany them in the sentence.

Page 64: Morphology

Morphology 1 64

These expected or required nominal concomitants to a verb are called its arguments.

If a NN compound is derived from a verb, the most natural way to interpret the whole compound is quite precise, the first element expresses the object argument of the verb (that is , the person or thing that undergoes the action).

For example, an X-restorer, whatever X is, something or someone that restores X.

Page 65: Morphology

Morphology 1 65

Sign-writer, slum clearance, crime prevention, wish-fulfilment.

Page 66: Morphology

Morphology 1 66

crime prevention

Page 67: Morphology

Morphology 1 67

NN compound like hairnet or mosquito net, in which the right-hand noun is not derived from a verb and whose interpretation is not precisely predictable on pure linguistic basis - a primary or root compound.

Page 68: Morphology

Morphology 1 68

NN compound like hair restorer or slum clearance, in which the first element is interpreted as the object of the verb contained within the second - a secondary or verbal compound (synthetic compound)

Secondary compounds are certainly right-headed

Page 69: Morphology

Morphology 1 69

HEADED AND HEADLESS COMPOUNDS:

Page 70: Morphology

Morphology 1 70

Adjective-noun (AN): blackboard, greenstone, faintheart

Page 71: Morphology

Morphology 1 71

faintheart

Page 72: Morphology

Morphology 1 72

faintheart - headless -its status as a noun is not determined by either of its components.

Headless AN compounds loudmouth, redshank (a kind of a bird that has red legs)

headless NN compounds stickleback( a kind of fish with spines on its back), sabretooth.

Page 73: Morphology

Morphology 1 73

A few VN-compound nouns resemble secondary compounds in that the noun at the right is interpreted as the object of the verb.

Pickpocket, killjoy Headless -a pickpocket is not a

kind of pocket,

Page 74: Morphology

Morphology 1 74

Some nouns consist of a verb and a preposition or adverb:

Take-off, sell-out, wrap-up, sit-in As for headless adjectives, there are quite a

number consisting of a preposition and a noun. Overland, in-house, with profits, offshore,

downmarket, upscale, underweight, over-budget The adjectival status of these compounds can

often be confirmed by their appropriateness in comparative contexts and with the modifier very:

They live in a very downmarket neighbourhood. This year’s expenditure is even more over-

budget than last year’s .

Page 75: Morphology

Morphology 1 75

exocentric endocentric.

Page 76: Morphology

Morphology 1 76

Blends and acronyms

Page 77: Morphology

Morphology 1 77

a kind of compound where at least one component is reproduced only partially - blends.

Page 78: Morphology

Morphology 1 78

smog talkathon cheeseburger

Page 79: Morphology

Morphology 1 79

acronyms NATO (for North Atlantic Treaty

Organization), ANZAC (for Australian and New Zealand Army Corps), RAM (random access memory), SCSI (pronounced scuzzy, small computer system interface), AIDS (aquired immune deficiency syndrome) .

Page 80: Morphology

Morphology 1 80

If the conventional way of reading the string is by pronouncing the name of each letter in turn, as with USA and RP (received pronunciation), then it is not an acronym but an abbreviation.

Page 81: Morphology

Morphology 1 81

Compounds containing bound combining forms.

Page 82: Morphology

Morphology 1 82

compounds that are made up of bound roots, known as combining forms.

Anthropology, sociology, cardiogram, electrocardiogram, retrograde, retrospect, plantigrade.

For most of these the meaning of the whole is clearly determinable from that of the parts.

For example: anthrop (o) – human plus –(o) logy, science or study, yields a word that means science or study of human beings and planti- (sole) (of foot) and –grade (walking) yields a word meaning walkin on the soles of the feet.

Page 83: Morphology

Morphology 1 83

Phrasal words

Page 84: Morphology

Morphology 1 84

jack-in-the-box.

Page 85: Morphology

Morphology 1 85

Structurally this has the appearance of a noun phrase in which the head noun, jack, is modified by a prepositional phrase, in the box , exactly parallel to the phrases :

People in the street or (a) book on the shelf. They form their plurals by suffixing –s not to the

head noun (as in books on the shelf) but to the whole expression : book on the shelves, jack-in-the boxes,

They jumped up and down like jack-in-the boxes. Though structurally a phrase, then, it behaves as

a word.

Page 86: Morphology

Morphology 1 86

Let´s contrast it with another item which is at least as idiosyncratic in meaning and which has a superficially similar structure: brother – in – law.

A crucial difference is that brother-in-law forms its plural by affixing – s not to the whole expression but to the head noun:

Brothers –in –law Despite its hypens, therefore, brother-in-

law is not a word at all but a phrase.

Page 87: Morphology

Morphology 1 87

Another examples of phrasal words: Dyed-in-the –wool Republican /s Couldn´t-care-less attitude