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Brief introduction to morphology

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A morpheme is the smallest meaning-bearing unit in a language. ... consonant-vowel (CV) template: CVCCVC (causative) vocalization: ui (perfect passive) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Brief introduction to morphology


1
Brief introduction to morphology
  • Morphology is the study of word structure and
    word formation processes in language.

2
Terminology
  • A morpheme is the smallest meaning-bearing unit
    in a language.
  • Free morphemes are independent words.
  • Bound morphemes, called affixes, cannot stand on
    their own.
  • Types of affixes
  • prefix attaches at front of word
  • suffix attaches at end of word
  • circumfix attaches around word
  • infix attaches inside word

3
References for examples
  • Examples are either from our textbook or from
    Linguistics, second edition, by Akmajian, Demers
    and Harnish, MIT press.

4
Morphological processes
  • There are different kinds of morphological
    processes, in particular
  • inflectional morphology
  • derivational morphology

5
English inflectional morphology
  • nouns
  • plural marker -s (dog s dogs)
  • possessive marker -s (dog s dogs)
  • verbs
  • 3rd person present singular -s (walk s
    walks)
  • past tense -ed (walk ed walked)
  • progressive -ing (walk ing walking)
  • past participle -en or -ed (eat en eaten)
  • adjectives
  • comparative -er (fast er faster)
  • superlative -est (fast est fastest)

6
Properties of (English) inflectional morphology
  • Inflectional morphology does not change
    grammatical category
  • In English, all inflectional affixes are suffices
    (they attach to the end of a word)
  • Inflectional affixes are attached after any
    derivational affixes
  • modern ize s modernizes (OK)
  • modern s ize (NOT OK)
  • modern ize s able (NOT OK)
  • Inflectional morphology carries a regular meaning
    transformation.

7
English derivational morphology
  • Derivational morphology can (but need not) change
    grammatical category.
  • un do undo (both verbs)
  • program able programmable (verb, adjective)
  • Derivational morphology does not always induce a
    regular/predictable meaning change there is
    drift
  • fix able fixable (able to be fixed)
  • read able readable (more than just able to
    be read)
  • wash able washable (more than just able to
    be washed)

8
Concatenative vs. nonconcatenative morphology
  • Concatenative morphology combines morphemes by
    concatentation (prefixes and suffixes demonstrate
    this)
  • Non-concatentative morphology combines in a
    non-concatenative manner
  • circumfixes and infixes
  • templatic morphology

9
Circumfix example
  • German
  • sagen (to say)
  • ge-t (past particple circumfix)
  • sagen ge-t ? gesagt (said)

10
Infix example
  • Bontoc Igorot (Philippine language)
  • kayu (wood)
  • -in- (product of a completed action)
  • kayu -in- ? kinayu (gathered wood)
  • English
  • abso-bloody-lutely (emphasis)

11
Templatic morphology
  • Semitic languages (Arabic, Hebrew)
  • stem (root), e.g. ktb (write)
  • consonant-vowel (CV) template CVCCVC (causative)
  • vocalization ui (perfect passive)
  • Combination consonants in stem map onto Cs in
    template, vowels in vocalization map onto Vs to
    yield surface form kuttib (will have been
    written)

12
Example detail
k t b
C V C C V C
? kuttib
u i
13
Parsing
  • refers to the recovery of structure from analysis
    of input
  • often refers to the processing of sentences
  • can also refer to the processing of words
  • Stemming refers to the recovery of a word stem
    given a surface form of the word
  • uncharacteristically un character istic
    ally

14
Lexicons
  • One approach list all words
  • difficult in English because some morphology is
    productive
  • (table adapted from page 62 of text)

STEM walk merge try map
-s walks merges tries maps
-ing walking merging trying mapping
-ed walked merged tried mapped
15
Issues
  • Not only do some affixes attach to large numbers
    of stems,
  • they also attach to new words in the language
  • spam, spams, spamming, spammed, spammer
  • Idea encode morphological rules to generate all
    forms of words from a minimal set of word stems.

16
Applications
  • lexicons
  • stemming
  • generating correct surface word forms

17
Try it out!
  • http//www.xrce.xerox.com/competencies/content-ana
    lysis/arabic/input/keyboard_input.html
  • We discovered in lecture that this particular
    demo is broken, but that the site has lots of
    other nifty demos.
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