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Morphology
Description
Words and their parts
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englishteaching #esl #efl
Flowchart by
Bella C
, updated more than 1 year ago
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Created by
Bella C
over 6 years ago
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Resource summary
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Word Classes
Morphemes
Words need to be placed in a certain order, this help to understand their function and meaning.
Context is important to understand the meanings and functions of individual words.
English words fall in two main categories: Content or form words (Major category) and Structure words (Minor category)
Minor Category
Major Category
Words that carry the content or esencial meaning: Nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs.
Open word classes
Words serve primarily to establishing grammatical relationships: Prepositions, pronouns, conjugations and determiners.
Closed word classes
Words occur in narrow range of possible positions, there is no flexibility in word order.
Words change very little over longs periods of time.
Establish logical relationships between the diferent part of sentences.
Words are fixed and invariant.
New words enter the language constantly. Example: Emoticons= Emotion + Icon
The smallest unit of meaning. A morpheme can be a single word or other independly meaningful units.
For example: The word "book" cannot be broken into any other units, it is a single morpheme
There are two kinds of morphemes: Bound & free.
Bound
Free
They are meaningful units that can stand alone, example: Blizzard, Never, Amaze or Grace.
Need to be attached or bound to other meaningful units, example: Undeniable = Un+deny+able
Morphology
Inflexional Morphemes
Derivational Morphemes
Are lexical morphemes. They somehow either change the class a word belongs to or change the semantic meaning of a word.
Are grammatical morphemes. Don't change the class to which a word belongs nor its semantic meaning.
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