Lesson 2 Word Structure
Lesson 2 Word Structure
Lesson 2 Word Structure
1. Introduction
1. Introduction
Marantz (1992) posits that grammar is blind to concepts, and cannot therefore be invoked to
explain formal properties of language.
Consequently, the only level able to explain why a word is included in a particular grammatical
category is the morphosyntactic level.
Moreover, this theory predicts that the morphosyntactic operations must be able to explain the
categorization of a word.
Key-words:
• Word,
• morpheme,
• lexeme, word-form
Morphology is one of the branches of linguistics in which we study about the structure of words.
Morphology differs from lexicology, which is the study of the form and meaning of words and how
they make up a language's vocabulary.
The morphological structure of words is the structure which consists of the elements to form words.
The structure of a word could be roughly explained as the internal arrangement of different
units/parts in the given word.
Language has over 450,000 entries. Most speakers don’t know all these words.
A word is a particular string of sounds united with a meaning in our mental dictionaries.
Once you learn both the sounds and their related meaning, you know the word.
It becomes an entry in your mental lexicon (the Greek word for dictionary), part of your linguistic
knowledge.
This shows that in a particular language, the form (sounds or pronunciation) and the meaning of a
word are like two sides of a coin.
A word is the main lexical unit of a language resulting from the association of a group of sounds with
a meaning.
To be clear, a word is not the smallest unit of the language, but the smallest part of a sentence that
can be said alone and still retain its meaning. It consists of morphemes.
The word is therefore a structural and semantic entity within the language system.
Since each word is a sound-meaning unit, each word stored in our mental lexicon must be listed with
its unique phonological representation, which determines its pronunciation, and its meaning.
For literate speakers, the spelling, or orthography, of most of the words we know is included in this
representation.
2.2. Roots
A root is an absolute item. Each word has one root and this root remains the same regardless of
what affixes are added.
Roots (or bases) are the morphemes that carry the principal concept, idea, or meaning in a word.
1. When roots are free morphemes, they constitute content and function words by
themselves, such as:
• Free morphemes are roots can stand alone (car, teach, tall).
2. When roots are bound morphemes, they form parts of words, as:
• So, a root is a form that represents the basic lexical content of a word but may not be a
word in itself.
2.3. Stems
what the stem is, is relative to the affix being discussed. A word can have several stems; for
example:
It is the basic unit at the derivational level, taking the inflections which shape the word
grammatically as a part of speech.
For example, in the word disestablishment, disestablish, establishment, and establish (which is a
root at the same time) are stems.
• Establishments, he establishes.
1. Simple stems are generally monomorphic and phonetically identical with the root
morphemes (sell, grow, pocket, motion, receive, etc.).
2. Derived stems are built on stems of various structures. Derived stems are mostly
polymorphic (e.g. governments, unbelievable, etc.).
3. Compound stems are made up of two immediate constituents, both of which are
themselves stems, e.g. match-box, pen-holder, ex-film-star, etc. It is built by joining two
stems, one of which is simple, the other is derived.
Lexemes are the vocabulary items that are listed in the dictionary.
According to the Macmillan English Dictionary for Advanced Learners (2007) second edition:
a lexeme is a word or group of words that has a meaning that cannot be understood from the
meaning of the parts of which it consists.
• For example the words “go” and “went” are different word forms which realize a single
lexeme “GO”.
• Another example: cook and cooks are different word-forms which belong to the same
lexeme “COOK”..
In this sense, see, sees, seeing, saw and seen are five different word-forms but belonging to the
same lexeme SEE (lexemes are written in capital letters).
The word-forms “perplexity”, “perplexed” and “perplexing” are different realizations (or
representations or manifestations) of the lexeme PERPLEX.
So, lexemes and word-forms share a core meaning although they are spelled and pronounced
differently.
2.5. Morphemes
In short, the term morpheme is used to refer to the smallest, indivisible units of semantic content
(which words are made up of), or grammatical function (like singular or plural number in the noun).
A morpheme – the minimal linguistic unit – is thus an arbitrary union of a sound and a meaning.
This may be too simple a definition, but it will serve our purposes for now.
In all languages:
• The decomposition of words into morphemes illustrates one of the fundamental properties
of human language – discreteness.
• sing-er-s,
• home-work,
• un-kind-ly,
• flipp-ed,
• de-nation-al-iz-ation.
So, a morpheme is a group of sounds that refers to a particular object, idea, or action.
A morpheme is the smallest linguistic unit that has meaning or a grammatical function.
The principal difference between the two is that a morpheme may or may not stand alone, whereas
a word, by definition, is freestanding.
• car-s ,
• re-consider,
• over-general-iz-ation.
A morpheme which may occur in isolation and functions as an independent word. Example: pay,
sum, form.
Free morphemes can function independently as words (town, dog) and can appear with other
lexemes (town hall, doghouse).
It is a unit of meaning that must be associated with another, for example (-er, un-, -less, -able).
Bound morphemes appear only as parts of words, always in conjunction with a root and sometimes
with other bound morphemes.
• For example, un- appears only accompanied by other morphemes to form a word
(unacceptable).
Most bound morphemes in English are affixes, particularly prefixes and suffixes.
Bound morphemes that are not affixes are called cranberry morphemes (meaningless morphemes)
for example: Competitive (formed from compete with the suffix –ive).
A derivational morpheme is an affixational morpheme which modifies the lexical meaning of the
root or part of speech of the affected word, and forms a new word.
1. management,
2. encourage,
3. fruitful.
For example, in the word happiness, the addition of the bound morpheme -ness to the root happy
changes the word from an adjective (happy) to a noun (happiness).
In the word unkind, un- functions as a derivational morpheme, for it inverts the meaning of the word
formed by the root kind.
Generally, the affixes used with root-words are the bound morphemes.
Inflectional morpheme
• For example: books, opened, strong-er. (see next lesson for more details)
1.7. Morphs
Morphs are segments of a phonological unit. For example, in the word “unacceptable”, the
segments Un- and –able are called morphs and mean something:
“Un” negative ; “able” = adjective means ‘it is possible’, while “accept” = lexeme
1.8. Allomorphs
Some morphemes can be realized in more than one way, i.e. a morpheme can have different forms in
different environments.
Allomorphs are variants of the same morpheme which have the same function but different forms.
Unlike the synonyms, they usually cannot be replaced one by the other.
• Let us consider the allomorphs of the English regular past tense morpheme below:
b. /d/ after a verb ending in any voiced sound except/d/ for instance:
c. /t/ after a verb ending in any voiceless consonant other than /t/ for instance:
• /d/ is chosen after voiced segments other than/d/ (with /i/ being inserted to
separate the alveolar stop of the suffix from the final alveolar stop of the verb to
which it is attached: ‘clean’ ‘cleaned’).
So far, all the examples of morphs that we have seen have involved only vowels and consonants.
We can say that /id/, /d/ and /t/ are English morphs, and we can group all these three morphs
together as allomorphs of the past tense morpheme.
The form of a morpheme is based on its pronunciation, i.e. the spelling is irrelevant.
All English words are classified into structural types and word classes.
Considering the morphemic structure of words and the processes of their formation, there are 4
structural types of words in English :
1) simple words: These are single-root morphemes (agree, child, red, etc.);
2) derivatives (or affixational derived words): consisting of one or more affixes : enjoyable,
childhood, unbelievable.
This type is widely represented by a great number of words belonging to the original English stock or
to earlier borrowings (house, room, book, work, port, street, table, etc.). In Modern English, it has
been greatly enlarged by the type of word-building called conversion (see lesson 4).
3) compound words: consisting of two or more stems (dining-room, bluebell, mother-in-law, good-
for-nothing, etc.). Words of this structural type are produced by the word-building process called
composition (see lesson 4).
• oval-shaped
• strong-willed.
1. Monomorphic words are root-words consisting of only one root-morpheme, for example,
simple words like (dry, grow, boss, sell).
2. Polymorphic words are words consisting of at least one root-morpheme and a number of
derivational affixes, for example, derivatives, compounds (customer, payee, body-building,
shipping).
Each word in your mental lexicon includes other information such as whether it is a noun, a pronoun,
a verb, an adjective, an adverb, a preposition, or a conjunction.
That is, its grammatical category, or syntactic class, is specified. If such information were not in the
mental lexicon, we would not know how to form grammatical sentences, nor would we be able to
distinguish grammatical from ungrammatical sentences.
Coming back to the issue of classification of words, all English words fall into two large classes or
categories: Content words and Function words.
3.2.1. Content words
Content words or lexical morphemes (or lexical items) are words that have semantic content (or
meaning) and usually refer to a thing, quality, state or action.
In a language, these morphemes generally take the forms of nouns, verbs, adjectives and adverbs
(for instance : dog, Peter, house, build, stay, happy, intelligent, quickly, always).
They form the open class of words (or content words) in a language, a class of words likely to grow
due to the incorporation of new members into it.
Function words are function or grammatical free morphemes which have little or no clear lexical
meaning on their own, but have a grammatical function which shows morphosyntactic relationships
in and between sentences.
• For instance : it, and, on, of, the, with, but, this, can, who, me….
References
Katamba, Francis. (1993). Modern Linguistics Morphology. London: MacKay’s of Chatham PLC.
Marius, Richard and S. Wiener, Harvey. (1985). The McGraw-Hill College Handbook. USA: Kingsport
Press, Inc.
Stephen Kucer and Cecilia Silva. (2006). Teaching the Dimensions of Literacy. New York: Routledge.
Wren, P.C and Martin, H. (2006). High School English Grammar & Composition. India: S Chand &
Company LTD.
Macmillan English Dictionary for Advanced Learners CD-ROM 2nd Edition. CD-ROM © Macmillan
Publishers Limited 2007. Text © A&C Black Publishers Ltd 2007.
• http://fis.ucalgary.ca/RF/GRContentWords-StructureWords.html
• http://grammar.about.com/od/c/g/contentwordterm.htm
• http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Function_word