Title: Folie 1
1HS Morphology Winter Term 2005/2006
Morphology Processes of Word Formation
Session 8 20 December 2005 Reference Bauer,
Laurie. The Morphological Structure of Words.
Introducing Linguistic Morphology. Edinburgh
EUP, 1988 pp. 19 42 Illustration Fromkin,
Victoria, and Robert Rodman. An Introduction to
Language. 4th ed. Forth Worth, Chicago, San
Franciso, et. al. Holt, Robert and Winston,
Inc. 1988 pp. 122-154
Presenters Denise Brilla Carsten
Litterscheidt
2English Studies Linguistics Processes of Word Formation
Your contribution to our moderation
Please refresh your memory of the following
passages Group 1 circumfixes p. 22 f.,
3.1.3 Group 2 infixes p. 23, 3.1.4 Group
3 interfixes p. 23 f., 3.1.5 Group
4 transfixes p. 24 f., 3.1.6 Group 5 base
modification segmental changes p. 26 ff., 3.3
(21) (24) incl. of text Group 6 base
modification suprasegmental chg. p. 29 f., 3.3
(27) (28) incl. of text Group 7 subtractive
morph p. 32, 3.5 process. Group 8 endo-
vs. exocentric compounding p. 33, 3.6 p. 36
much rice. Group 9 dvanda compounds p. 36,
Many lges prim. compounds. Group 10
incorporation p. 36, These are p. 38 (46)
incl. Group 11 neo-classical compounds p. 38,
Compounds end of page Group 12 unique
morphs p. 40, 3.8 Your Task Please summarize
briefly (!) the main ideas stated in your
passage, and choose one good example to
illustrate each phenomenon. Choose one
spokesperson to present your findings.
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Affixation sometimes not as easy as it seems
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Affixation
- Circumfix
- consists of a prefix and a suffix acting
together to surround a base -
- Examples German past participles of weak
verbs - - film-en ? ge-film-t
- to film filmed
- - frag-en ? ge-frag-t
- to ask asked
- - lob-en ? ge-lob-t
- to praise praised
- - zeig-en ? ge-zeig-t
- to show shown
-
- ? if considered a single affix, get
discontinuous morph (very rare)
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Affixation
- Infix
- morph inserted into the base
- used derivationally OR inflectionally
- voh ? v-an-oh sulat ? s-um-ulat
- know wise write wrote
- (from Chrau, Vietnam) (from Tagalog,
Phillippines) - ? creation of discontinuous base (very rare)
- In the same word-form, infixes can co-occur
with prefixes and suffixes - Example sulat write ? base
- s-um-ulat wrote ? infixation
- s-in-ulat was written ? infixation
- further preterite passives
- i-s-in-ulat second passive theme ? infix.
prefixation - s-in-ulat-an third passive theme ? infix.
suffixation
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Affixation
- Infix speciality Interfix
- empty morph (i.e. it does not carry morphemic
meaning) which occurs only between two other
forms -
- Examples German compounding
- Auge Arzt ? Auge-n-arzt eye doctor
- Bauer Frau ? Bauer-s-frau farmers wife
- Strauss Ei ? Strauss-en-ei ostrich egg
- Geburt Jahr ? Geburt-s-jahr birth year
-
- English neo-classical compounding
- electr-o-lyte
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Affixation
- Infix speciality Transfix
- affix which occurs throughout the base
- only appears in the Semitic languages
- - roots are created by a concatenation of
consonants, they never occur in isolation - - transfixes, which always consist of vowels,
are then added to the root - - each transfix occurs in a fixed position in
the root - Example Egyptian Arabic ktb (to write)
- ?katab he wrote
- ?jiktib he will write
- mak?tuub written
- mak?taba bookshops
- ma?kaatib bookshops
- ki?taab book
- ?kaatib clerk
- ? transfixation involves two sets of
discontinuous morphs - ? thus, transfixes are the most complex type of
affix
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Internal base modifications
- involve phonological changes to the base
- are either segmental OR suprasegmental
- segmental modifications
- Consonantal Change Voicing
- N ? V change mou/?/ ? mou/?/
- thie/f/ ? thie/v/
- sing. ? pl. change mouth/?/ ? mou/?/s
- hou/s/ ? hou/z/es
- shel/f/ ? shel/v/s
- Vowel Mutation
- Umlaut assimilation to a following vowel, e.g.
f/?/t ? f/i/t - Ablaut any other instance of vowel mutation,
e.g. s/?/ng ? s/?/ng ? s/a/ng - ? mostly found in Germanic languages
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Internal base modifications
- involve phonological changes to the base
- are either segmental OR suprasegmental
- suprasegmental modifications (through superfixes)
- Change of stress pattern
- N ? V change ?discount ? dis?count
- ?import ? im?port
- ?insult ? in?sult
- ? also called replacive morphs the
replacement of one phonological sequence by
another - similarly m/??/se ? m/??/ce
- ? controversy this would redefine the notion of
morph to include in addition to form the
notion of process (? replacing a morph) - ? other scholars refer to such processes as
infixation - ? term replacive morph predominates
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Subtractive Morphs
- morphs which are removed by a morphological
process - In French subtract the final consonant of the
feminine form ? masculine form - Example mauvaise (f) ? mauvaix (m)
- verte (f) ? vert (m)
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Compounding I a
- Endocentric compounds
- denote a sub-class of the items denoted by one
of their elements ? hyponym of main/head element - Example sea-bird
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Compounding I b
- Exocentric compounds
- denote something which is not a sub-class of
either of the elements in the compounds - Example egg-head
- ? sometimes called bahuvrihi compounds
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Compounding II
- Dvanda / copulative compounds
- denote an entity made up of the two or more
elements mentioned in the compound together - Example bleu blanc rouge
- ? III root compounds / primary compounds
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Compounding III
- Synthetic (or verbal nexus) compounds
- head element contains a verb
- Example dish washer
- Incorporation
- a compound created in this way is itself a
verb - noun in the modifying element has same semantic
function as direct object of verb involved - frequently denote an activity
- Example Maori hoko rare ( lolly-buy)
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Compounding III
- Neo-classical compounds
- two lexemes involved in their maku up are not
English lexemes ? Greek, Latin - Example biology, geometry
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Unique morphs
- only occur in one fixed expression
- bound to a particular collocation
- no own meaning, but make something a subclass
- Example cranberry
- ? often called cranberry morphs
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Conclusion
Bauer There is a hierarchy of word
formation processes. Compounding
norm Affixation Suffixation other
affixation processes Other word formation
processes deviation from norm
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Summary of previously known processes of word
formation
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Affixation
- Suffix
- the commonest bound morpheme in all languages
- used derivationally OR inflectionally
- constitut-ion-ality talo-i-ssa-an
- house-pl-in-3rd person possessive
- from Finnish in their houses
- When derivational and inflectional suffixes
co-occur in the same word- form, the general rule
is that the derivational suffixes precede the
inflectional ones. - Example égal-is-a
- equal (V, deriv.)-3rd person sing-past
(infl.) - from French he/she/it equalised
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Affixation
- Suffix ctd.
- How to mistake plural suffixation via analogy
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Affixation
- Prefix
- rarer than suffixes
- used derivationally OR inflectionally
- dis-en-tangle a-si-nga-li-jua
- he-negative-concessive-past-know
- from Swahili if he had not known
- When derivational and inflectional prefixes
co-occur in the same word- form, the general rule
is that the inflectional prefix precedes the
derivational prefix. - Example jih ji-mi-langu
- he 3rd person (younger) (infl.)-intransitive
(deriv.)-swim - from Achenese (Sumatra) he swims
(intransitive use) - In the same word-form, prexifes and suffixes
can occur in all possible combinations.
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Reduplication
- using some part of (or the whole) base more
than once in a word - far more common in the languages of the world
than any affixation process - base reduplication resembles compounding
- Example Afrikaans
- dik ? dik-dik thick ? very thick
- can also form types of affixes
- Examples Motu, Papua New Guinea redupl.
- mero ? me-mero boy ? boys prefix
- ? meromero ? little
boy whole word - ? memeromemero ? little
boys both - Maori, New Zealand indigenous language
- aahua ? aahua-hua appearance ?
resemble suffix - often used iconically, i.e. the form of the
word reflects its meaning - ? often used to indicate plurality,
intensity, and repetition - usually determined phonologically a
reduplication rule states how much of the base
is to be reduplicated in terms of consonants,
vowels, syllables, and word-forms
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Relationship with no change of form
- Zero morphs
- account for the difference in function between
homophonous forms such as sgl-pl / N-V / N-Adj /
Adj-V / - Examples sheep sheep / download to download
/ a round round / emtpy to empty / - processes conversion, zero-derivation,
functional shift
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Cases involving shortening the base
- Backformation derivational process
- case where the element subtracted is / looks
like a morpheme with independent existence
elsewhere in the language -
- Examples pointer, retriever, warbler ? point,
retrieve, warble - in retrospect, backformation is invisible. Only
noticeable when backformation word unfamiliar - Clipping shortening a word without changing
its meaning or part of speech, only stylistic
change -
- Examples deli(catessen), sci(ence) fi(ction)
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Alphabet-based formation
- Blends portmanteau word
- two meanings packed up into one word
- overlap ? no information is lost
-
- Example glass asphalt ? glasphalt
- Acronyms coined from initial letters of the
words in a name, title or phrase ? pronounced as
a new word - Examples NATO, AIDS
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Suppletion
- roots so completely different
- derived from different words
- cannot be derived by general rules
- Examples good better, go went
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