Morphology notes
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Grammatical Aspects of
Language
Morphology: The Words of
Language
The Wug Experiment
The Wug Experiment
The Wug Experiment
The Wug Experiment
The Wug Experiment
Morphology
(This is a really famous
experiment, by the way!)
The Wug Test
• Footage of a child taking the wug test
• Jean Berko Gleason (the inventor of the wug
test) administers the test to an adult
Morphology
• The study of the structure of words
• The rules of word formation
• How do we store all these words in our brains?
Morphology
• How do we know when one word stops and the
other starts?
• Lexicon: an individual’s mental dictionary
Your mental lexicon
• Take the word play. In your notebook, write
down the following:
–
–
–
–
How you’d pronounce it (phonetically)
As many definitions as you can think of
The spelling
Use it in two sentences, using it slightly
differently each time.
Your mental lexicon
• The brain catalogues:
– Pronunciation
– Meaning
– Related words (synonyms, antonyms, close
semantic relationships)
– Spelling
– Alternate pronunciations or spellings
– Grammatical category (noun, verb, etc.)
Content Words
and Function Words
• Content words
• Function words
Content Words
and Function Words
• Count the number of Fs in this sentence:
FINISHED FILES ARE THE RESULT OF
YEARS OF SCIENTIFIC STUDY
COMBINED WITH THE EXPERIENCE
OF YEARS.
Write down the number; don’t say it out loud.
Content Words
and Function Words
• There are six (most people only count three)
• Most people skip over at least one function
word
FINISHED FILES ARE THE RESULT OF
YEARS OF SCIENTIFIC STUDY
COMBINED WITH THE EXPERIENCE
OF YEARS.
Morphemes: The Minimal Units of
Meaning
“They gave it to me,” Humpty Dumpty
continued, “for an un-birthday present.”
“I beg your pardon?” Alice said with a puzzled
air.
“I’m not offended,” said Humpty Dumpty.
“I mean, what is an un-birthday present?”
“A present given when it isn’t your birthday,
of course.”
--Lewis Carroll, Through the Looking Glass
Inflection
• An inflected language: changes words slightly
to change meaning.
• English depends on inflection and syntax
Inflection vs. Sytax:
Latin vs. English
In English, word order changes the meaning:
The boy gives the girl a rose.
The girl gives the boy a rose.
Inflection vs. Syntax
Latin vs. English
In Latin, words can be in any order. The inflection
(the way the word changes) changes the meaning.
Puer / Pueri / Puero / Puerum = boy
Puella / Puellae / Puellam = girl
Rosa / Rosae / Rosam / Rosarum = rose
Puer puellae rosam dat = The boy gives the girl a rose
Puellae rosam puer dat = The boy gives the girl a rose
Puellae puer rosam dat = The boy gives the girl a rose
Rosam dat puer puellae = The boy gives the girl a rose
Morphemes: The Minimal Units of
Meaning
• Morpheme: a basic unit of meaning that can’t
be broken down into a smaller unit of
meaning.
• Can be a root, prefix, or suffix
• Morphology: The study of how words can be
put together.
Morphemes: The Minimal Units of
Meaning
• If a singer sings and a flinger flings, why
doesn’t a finger fing?
– Singer is two morphemes (sing + er)
– Finger is only one morpheme (it can’t be broken
down into any more morphemes)
• All languages are discrete
Morphemes: The Minimal Units of
Meaning
• Free morphemes
• Bound morphemes
Morphemes in other languages
• Different languages attach morphemes
differently
• Isthmus Zapotec (a native Mexican language)
– Attaches prefix ka- to make a word plural
zigi (chin)
zike (shoulder)
diaga (ear)
kazigi (chins)
kazike (shoulders)
kadiaga (ears)
Morphemes in other languages
• In English, we don’t change anything (about
the word) to change a verb to a noun.
– I like to dance vs. There’s a dance on Friday
• Turkish
– add suffix –ak to change a verb to a noun
Dur (to stop)
Bat (to sink)
durak (stopping place)
batak (sinking place / marsh or swamp)
Morphemes in other languages
• In English, we express reciprocal action by
saying each other (love each other, understand
each other)
• Turkish
– Adds –ish (after a consonant) or –sh (after a
vowel) to express reciprocal action
Anla (understand)
Sev (love)
anlash (understand each other)
sevish (love each other)
Morphemes in other languages
• Some languages have infixes, or morphemes
inserted into other morphemes
• Bontoc (Philippines)
Fikas (strong)
Kilad (red)
Fusul (enemy)
fumikas (to be strong)
kumilad (to be red)
fumusul (to be an enemy)
Does English have infixes?
Morphemes in Other Languages
• Circumfixes: morphemes that are attached to
a base morpheme at the beginning and end.
• Chickasaw (Native language of OK)
– A word is made negative by adding ik- to the
beginning, dropping the final vowel, and adding
an –o
Chokma (he is good)
Lakna (it is yellow)
Palli (it is hot)
Tiwwi (he opens it)
ikchokmo (he isn’t good)
iklanko (it isn’t yellow)
ikpallo (it isn’t hot)
iktiwwo (he doesn’t open it)
– English has a few examples of circumfixes
Roots and Stems
• Bound roots
It had been a rough day, so when I walked into the party I was very
chalant, despite my efforts to appear gruntled and consolate. I was
furling my wieldy umbrella . . . when I saw her. . . . She was a descript
person. . . . Her hair was kempt, her clothing shevelled, and she moved
in a gainly way.
--Jack Winter, “How I Met My Wife”
• Why are some roots bound?
Roots and Stems
• You can add an affix to almost any word to
make a new word.
– If someone from Iowa is an Iowan, what would
you call someone from Nebraska?
– What’s the plural of sneet?
– If someone performed the act of gloobing
yesterday, what did they do?
Roots and Stems
• How did you know what to do?
– Your lexicon for every morpheme you know
includes the following:
• The pronunciation
• The meaning
• The rules for combining morphemes into complex
words