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Some basic concepts Laurie Bauer 1993

The text delves into fundamental concepts of morphology, starting with the definition of morphemes as abstract units of analysis and their phonetic realizations. It introduces the terms morph and allomorph, explaining the latter as phonetically, lexically, or grammatically conditioned variants of a morpheme.

Some basic concepts Laurie Bauer 1993

Some basic concepts Laurie Bauer 1993

The definition of "Word" has been a major problem for linguistics theory

The definition of a "Word" must be considerated a notion for operating

'Word-formation' is a traditional label, and one which is useful, but it doesn't generally cover all possible ways of forming everything that can be called a 'word'

Any discussions of word formation makes 2 assumptions

1. There are such things as words
2. At least some of them are formed

The next examples with different endings, exemplify the process od derivation

nation nation - hood nation - al nation - al - ize naton - al - ist nation - al - ist - ic nation - al - ity

Compounding or composition is roughly speaking, the process of puttin 2 words together to form a third, for example...

oil-paper paperclip paper acroplane paper thin (to) wallpaper wastepaper wastepaper basket

The basic units of analysis recognized in morphoogy are 'morphemes'. This is known as an elements

untouchables can be segmented to show its constituent elements un-touc-able-s

Affixes can be divided into 'prefixes' wich are attached before a base

suffixes, wich are attached after a base
infixes wich are attached inside a base

'root', 'steam', and 'base' are all terms used in the literature to designate that part of a word that remains when all affixes have been removed

A root is a form which is not further analysable, either in terms of derivational or inflectional morphology
A steam is of concern only when dealing with inflectional morphology

A base is any form to which affixes of any king can be added

According to Matthews (1972) it is related to a morphological condition

Irregular plural fors in English are determined by the word in question; only occur with that word The only word in English that makes its plural by adding -en is ox; however, -en dosn't affect markers os plurality

In Latin "regebam" is a "word" meaning 'I was ruling' InMaori i is a "word" meaning is 'past tese'

To explain what is the process of inflection we can see some examples from Italian inflectional paradigm

Parl . o = I speak Parl . i = you (sg.) speak Parl . a = he/she/is apeaks PArl . iamo = we speak Parl . ate = you (pl.) speak Parl . ano = they speak
Subtopic

The lexeme is like a base of the word for example...

Shoot shoots shooting shot The lexeme of the word is just "shoot"

Morphemes are abstraact elements of analysis, and what actually occurs is a phonetic form which realizes the morphemes

Besides morpheme ans morph, a third term, 'allomorph' is required for morphological analysis
An allomorph is a phonetically, lexically or gramatically conditioned member of a set of morphs representing a particullar morpheme
A morph can be defined as a segment of a word-form which represents a particular morpheme

A morph which can occur in solation is termed a 'free morph'

A morph wich can only occur in a wor-form in conjunction with at least one other morph is termed 'bound morph'

A lexeme is clearly analysable into its constituent morphs

'coverage' is clearly analysable into cover + age