19 morfemy

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19. Types of morphemes in English.
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Morpheme – a minimal unit of meaning or grammatical function
Morphemes can be divided into two general classes:
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Free morphemes – morphemes which can stand by themselves as single words, e.g. open, tour, dog
Bound morphemes – morphemes which cannot stand alone, but which are typically attached to other morphemes to form a word, e.g. re-, -ist, - ed, -s
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. Bound morphemes are usually prefixes or suffixes. Unproductive, non-affix morphemes that exist only in bound form are known as ‘cranberry’ morphemes, from the ‘cran’ in that very word.
Example: The word reopened consists of three morphemes: re- (bound morpheme meaning ‘again’), -open- (free morpheme) and -ed (bound morpheme indicating past tense
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Free morphemes fall into two categories
: lexical morphemes – set of ordinary nouns, adjectives and verbs which carry the ‘content’ of a message we convey e.g. boy, man, yellow, look, sincere
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and functional morphemes – functional words in the language such as conjunctions, prepositions, articles and pronouns e.g. and, but, when, on, near, in, the, that
. Bound morphemes can also be divided into two categories
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derivational morphemes – used to make new words; added to a stem to make a word of a different grammatical category
The addition of the derivational morpheme –ness changes the adjective good to the noun goodness.
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Derivational morphemes include suffixes (e.g. -ish, -ly) and prefixes (e.g. re-, pre-, ex-, dis-, co-, un-).
They carry semantic information; inflectional morphemes – used to indicate aspects of the grammatical function of a word
Inflectional morphemes - these morphemes are used to show if a word is plural or singular, if it is past or present tense, comparative or possessive form etc
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. Inflectional morphemes carry grammatical information. In English all inflectional morphemes are suffixes (e.g. -ing, -ed, -er).

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