Lecture II. Working Definitions of Principal Concepts
The word is not the smallest unit of the language. It consists of morphemes.
The morpheme may be defined as the smallest meaningful unit which has a sound
form and meaning and which occurs in speech only as a part of a word.
Word formation is the creation of new words from elements already existing in
the language. Every language has its own structural patterns of word formation.
Morphemes are subdivided into root - morphemes and affixational morphemes.
The root morpheme is the lexical center of the word. It is the semantic nucleus
of a word with which no grammatical properties of the word are connected.
Affixational morphemes include inflections and derivational affixes.
Inflection is an affixal morpheme which carries only grammatical meaning thus
relevant only for the formation of word-forms (books, opened, strong-er).
Derivational morpheme is an affixal morpheme which modifies the lexical
meaning of the root and forms a new word. In many cases it adds the part-of-speech
meaning to the root (manage-ment, en-courage, fruit-ful)
Morphemes which may occur in isolation and function as independent words
are called free morphemes (pay, sum, form). Morphemes which are not found in
isolation are called bound morphemes (-er, un-, -less)
Morphemic analysis.
The segmentation of words is generally carried out according to the method of
Immediate and Ultimate Constituents. This method is based upon the binary principle,
i.e. each stage of procedure involves two components the word immediately breaks
into. At each stage these two components are referred to as the Immediate
Constituents (IC). Each IC at the next stage of analysis is in turn broken into smaller
meaningful elements. The analysis is completed when we arrive at constituents
incapable of further division, i.e. morphemes. These are referred to as Ultimate
Constituents (UC). The analysis of word-structure on the morphemic level must
naturally proceed to the stage of UC-s.
Allomorphes are the phonemic variants of the given morpheme e.g. il-, im-, ir-,
are the allomorphes of the prefix in- (illiterate, important, irregular, inconstant).
Monomorphic are root-words consisting of only one root-morpheme i.e. simple
words (dry, grow, boss, sell).
Polymorphic are words consisting of at least one root-morpheme and a number
of derivational affixes, i.e. derivatives, compounds (customer, payee, body-building,
shipping).
Derived words are those composed of one root-morpheme and one more
derivational morphemes (consignment, outgoing, publicity).
Derived words are those composed of one root-morpheme or more. Compound
words contain at least two root-morphemes (warehouse, camera-man),
Productivity is the ability to form new words after existing patterns which are
readily understood by the speakers of a language. Synchronically the most important
and the most productive ways of word-formation are affixation, conversion, word-
composition and abbreviation (contraction). In the course of time the productivity of
this or that way of word-formation may change. Sound interchange or gradation
(blood - to bleed, to abide -abode, to strike - stroke) was a productive way of word
building in old English and is important for a diachronic study of the English
language. It has lost its productivity in Modern English and no new word can be
coined by means of sound gradation. Affixation on the contrary was productive in Old
English and is still one of the most productive ways of word building in Modern
English.
Affixation is the formation of new words with the help of derivational affixes.
Suffixation is more productive than prefixation. In Modern English suffixation is a
characteristic of noun and adjective formation, while prefixation is typical of verb
formation (incoming, trainee, principal, promotion).
Affixes are usually divided into living and dead affixes. Living affixes are
easily separated from the stem (care-ful). Dead affixes have become fully merged
with the stem and can be singled out by a diachronic analysis of the development of
the word (admit - L.- ad + mittere). Living affixes are in their turn divided into
productive and non-productive affixes. In many cases the choice of the affixes is a
mean of differentiating of meaning: uninterested - disinterested distrust – mistrust.
Word-composition is another type of word-building which is highly productive.
That is when new words are produced by combining two or more stems.
Stem is that part of a word which remains unchanged throughout its paradigm
and to which grammatical inflexions and affixes are added. The bulk of compound
words is motivated and the semantic relations between the two components are
transparent.
Compound words proper are formed by joining together stems of words already
available in the language. Compound proper is a word, the two Immediate
Constituents of which are stems of notional words, e.g. ice-cold (N + A), ill-
luck(A+N).
Derivational compound is a word formed by a simultaneous process of
composition and derivation. Derivational compound is formed by composing a new
stem that does not exist outside this pattern and to which suffix is added. Derivational
compound is a word consisting of two Immediate Constituents, only one of which is a
compound stem of notional words, while the other is a derivational affix, e.g. blue -
eyed - (A+N) + ed In coordinative compounds neither of the components dominates
the other, both are structurally and semantically independent and constitute two
structural and semantic centres, e.g. breath-taking, self-discipline, word-formation.
|