Title: Derivational Affixation
1 Derivational Affixation
- nation N
- nation al ADJ
- nation al ize V
- nation al iz ation N
- inter nation al iz ation N
2Hierarchical Structure of Derivation
- Adjective
- un Adjective
- Noun atic
- system
Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman Nina Hyams.
2011. An Introduction to Language, 9th edition.
Wadsworth, Cengage Learning, p. 53.
3What do Derivational Morphemes give us?
- ? NEW words / different words
- ? RELATED Meaning, BUT NOT THE SAME (happy vs.
unhappy) - ? Maybe different grammatical categorymaybe not
4What do Inflectional Morphemes give us?
- ? Same word (different tense, number,
person/agreement, case) usually used in the
syntax of the language - ? Same basic meaning
- ? No change in grammatical category
5How can knowing about morphology help you?
- ? To COMPREHEND unknown words when you encounter
them - ? For GUESSING unknown words
- ? To LEARN unknown / new words
- ? To MEMORIZE OR REMEMBER them
6Productive Affixes
- -able Vable V ? ADJ
- -ness ADJness ADJ ? N
- -er Ver V ? N
- un- unADJ ADJ ? ADJ
- -ity ADJity ADJ ? N
- -th ADJth ADJ ? N
- -en ADJen ADJ ? V
Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman Nina Hyams.
2011. An Introduction to Language, 9th edition.
Wadsworth, Cengage Learning.
7Types of Accidental Gaps
- 1. Some sound sequences OK, but not used in
English - (blick, slarm, krobe)
- 2. Some derived forms do not exist
- no unpossible (only impossible)
- 3. Some gaps / missing word in English lexicon
- no generic common word for BOVINE (only COW and
BULL)
8Accidental Derivational Gaps
- permit commit transmit
- -sion permission commission transmission
- -ive permissive commissive transmissive
- -ible permissible commissible transmissible
- in- impermissible (incommissible) intransmis
sible - -al (permittal) committal transmittal
- -er (permissioner) commissioner
(transmissioner) - -er permitter committor
transmitter
Miller, George A. 1996. The Science of Words. New
York Scientific American Library, p. 109.
9Morphological Analysis
- Adjective Meaning
- ugly very unattractive
- uglier more ugly
- ugliest most ugly
- pretty nice looking
- prettier more nice looking
- prettiest most nice looking
- tall large in height
- taller more tall
- tallest most tall
Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman Nina Hyams.
2011. An Introduction to Language, 9th edition.
Wadsworth, Cengage Learning, p. 65.
10Zulu(Morphology Exercise 5)
- PREFIX NUMBER ROOT GLOSS SUFFIX
CLASS - um- SINGULAR
- aba- PLURAL
-
-
-i NOUN -
-a VERB - faz married
woman -i - fan boy
-i - zal parent
-i - fundis teacher /
teach -i / a - baz carver / carve
-i / a - lim farmer / farm
-i / a - dlal player /
play -i / a - fund reader /
read -i / a
11Chickasaw(Morphology Ex 17 or 18)
- a. Root morphemes
- 1. chaaha to be tall
- 2. hopoba to be hungry
- b. Morphemes
- 1. -tok past tense
- 2. sa- I
- 3. chi- you
- 4. he/she
- c. ispokni to be old
- 1. chisipokni you are old
- 2. sipoknitok he was old
- 3. hoosipokni they are old
12Samoan(Morphology Exercise 9 or 10)
- a.
- (1) they weave lalaga
- (2) they travel savavali
- (3) he sings pese
- b.
- Morphological rule for making third person
plural from third person singular verb forms in
Samoan - Reduplicate the second syllable from the end.