Morpheme: Meaning (information, definition, explanation, facts)

According to linguistic study, a morpheme is the smallest meaningful unit in a given language. This is the definition established in 1933 by the American linguist Leonard Bloomfield.

English Example: The word "unbelievable" has three morphemes "un-", a bound morpheme, meaning "non-", "-believe-" a free morpheme, and "-able". "un-" is also a prefix, "-able" is a suffix. Both are affixes.

Types of morphemes:

  • Free morphemes like town, dog can appear with other lexemes (as in town-hall or dog-house) or they can stand alone, or "free". Allomorphs are variants of a morpheme, e.g. the plural marker in English is sometimes realized as /-z/, /-s/ or /-Iz/.
  • Bound morphemes like 'un'- appear only together with other morphemes to form a lexeme. Bound morphemes in general tend to be prefixes and suffixes.
  • Inflectional morphemes modify a word's tense, number, aspect, and so on.
  • Derivational morphemes can be added to a word to create (derive) another word: the addition of "-ness" to "happy", for instance > "happiness."

See also: Morphology, Morphophonology, Morphological analysis, Lemmata

Reference

  • Andrew Spencer, Morphological Theory, Blackwell, Oxford 1992

Find more facts
 
Further reference
Remember what Morpheme means:
Other sources
Search for Morpheme information on:  amazon.com
Your reference for information, definition
http://explanation-guide.info/meaning/Morpheme.html
Licensing information:
This article uses material from Wikipedia (credits) and is made available under the terms of the GNU FDL (copy).
Image licensing information is accessible by clicking the image.

Welcome, guest!
You are not logged in
ID:
Password:

Social bookmarks


Book search

Recent searches