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Inflections

encode grammatical meaning;

are syntactically relevant;

occur outside all derivation;

do not change part of speech;

are rarely semantically opaque;

are fully productive;

are always suffixational (in English).

A lexicalised grammatical affix is an inflection which developed into a derivational suffix.

For example:

s in customs ‘import duties’, colours ‘a flag / flags of a ship’ does not express plurality;

s in at the dentist’s, at my friend’s no longer indicates possession.

13. The derivative structure of English words. The distinction between morphological stem and derivational base. Morphemic analysis vs derivational analysis.

A morpheme (Gr. morphé ‘form, shape’) is one of the fundamental units of a language, a minimum sign that is an association of a given meaning with a given form (sound and graphic), e.g. old, un+happy, grow+th, blue+colour+ed.

Depending on the number of morphemes, words are divided into:

monomorphic are root-words consisting of only one root-morpheme, i.e. simple words, e.g. to grow, a book, white, fast etc.

polymorphic are words consisting of at least one root-morpheme and a number of derivational affixes, i.e. derivatives, compounds, e.g. good-looking, employee, blue-eyed etc.

According to their functions and meaning, affixes fall into:

derivational, e.g. suffixes: abstract-noun-makers (-age, -dom, -ery, -ing, -ism); concrete-noun-makers (-eer, -er, -ess, -let); adverb-makers (-ly, -ward(s), -wise); verb-makers (-ate, -en, -ify, -ize/-ise); adjective-/noun-makers (-ful, -ese, -(i)an, -ist), etc.; they are attached to a derivational base; they are the object of study of derivational morphology which investigates the way in which new items of vocabulary can be built up out of combinations of elements;

functional (inflectional), e.g. -s (plurality; 3rd person singular); ‘s (genitive case); -n’t (contracted negative); -ed (past tense; past participle); -ing (present participle); -er, -est (comparison); they are attached to a morphological stem; they are the object of study of inflectional morphology which deals with the way words vary in their form in order to express a grammatical contrast.

What do words consist of?

Morphemic analysis is the analysis limited to stating the number and types of morphemes that make up a word regardless of their role in the formation of this word, viz. it only defines the morphemes comprising a word, but does not reveal their hierarchy.

How are words formed?

Derivational analysis explores the derivative types of words, their construction and their interrelation.

interchange, n

interview, v

14. General description of word-formation in Modern English. Productive and nonproductive means.

Word-formation (word-building) is the creation of new words from the material available in the language on certain formulas and patterns.

Functions of word-formation:

nominative function;

communicative function.

Word-formation results in:

development of the vocabulary (92,5% of neologisms in Modern English result from word-formation);

re-categorisation (derivatives belong to different word classes).

Word-family is a set of words that all share a common root, e.g. graceful, ungraceful, gracefulness, to disgrace, disgracefully, disgraceful, disgrace, disgracefulness, gracelessly, graceless etc.

Productivity is the ability to form new words after existing patterns which are readily understood by speakers of a language.

Productive means:

Affixation

Word-composition

conversion

shortening

Non-productive means:

back-formation

onomatopoeia

sound and stress interchange

sentence condensation

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