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Morphology An Introduction to the Structure of Words

Morphology An Introduction to the Structure of Words. By Christian Monson. Goals. Introduction to morphology look at one interesting morphological phenomenon—allomorphy To help you read linguistic texts what features can morphemes realize. What is a Word?.

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Morphology An Introduction to the Structure of Words

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  1. MorphologyAn Introduction tothe Structure of Words By Christian Monson

  2. Goals • Introduction to morphology • look at one interesting morphological phenomenon—allomorphy • To help you read linguistic texts • what features can morphemes realize

  3. What is a Word? • There are no spaces in spoken language Hewenttotownonhishorse • Hew entt otow non hi shor se • He went to town on his horse

  4. Example of Words (Hungarian) a) Jánosénekel John sings • Máriaénekel Mary sings • Máriafut Mary runs

  5. Example of Words (Hungarian) a) Jánosénekel John sings b) Máriaénekel Mary sings c) Máriafut Maryruns

  6. What is a Word? • Possible Criteria • Recurring units of form and meaning • The smallest things you can say in isolation • Pauses are not possible inside a word • There are many exceptions to these rules • Linguists always qualify what they mean by a word • In this class words will be separated by spaces. • Even if the orthography of the language does not use spaces

  7. Morphemes • Smallest unit of form and meaning • Here too there are exceptions but most linguists pretend that morphemes really do exist

  8. Example of Morphemes (Hungarian again) keresek Iseek keresel you seek keres he/she/it seeks hiszek I believe hiszel you believe hisz he/she/it believes

  9. Example of Morphemes (Hungarian again) keresekIseek kereselyouseek keresØhe/she/itseeks hiszekIbelieve hiszelyoubelieve hiszØhe/she/itbelieves

  10. Allomorphs • Same meaning • Different form • Complementary distribution

  11. Allomorphy Example:English Plural bags, crabs, accidents, names, lollipops, brushes, churches, maps, toes, faces, beds, books, prizes, flies, giraffes, deaths, judges, garages…

  12. Allomorphy Example:English Plural bags, crabs, accidents, names, lollipops, brushes, churches, maps, toes, faces, beds, books, prizes, flies, giraffes, deaths, judges, garages… * = reduced vowel

  13. Allomorph Environments • Each allomorph has a separate environment • Environments are complementary • Wrong: s occurs after consonants • Because: z and *z also occur after consonants • Environments are complete • Wrong: z occurs after vowels • Because: z also occurs after voiced non-sibilants • No unused environments • Wrong (usually): The plural of words ending in the phoneme p do not exist

  14. English Plural Cont. • Identify the allomorph environments • Generalize if possible • may require phonology—not covered in this class.

  15. English Plural Cont. • Identify the allomorph environments • Generalize if possible • may require phonology—not covered in this class.

  16. English Plural Cont. • Identify the allomorph environments • Generalize if possible • may require phonology—not covered in this class.

  17. English Plural Cont. • Identify the allomorph environments • Generalize if possible • may require phonology—not covered in this class.

  18. English Plural Cont. • Identify the allomorph environments • Generalize if possible • may require phonology—not covered in this class.

  19. Complementary Distribution

  20. Complementary Distribution All Sounds (consonants + vowels)

  21. Complementary Distribution Consonants (b, d, f, g, k, l, m, …) All Sounds (consonants + vowels)

  22. Complementary Distribution Sibilants (s, z, sh, ch, dg, …) Consonants (b, d, f, g, k, l, m, …) All Sounds (consonants + vowels)

  23. Complementary Distribution Sibilants (s, z, sh, ch, dg, …) Voiced (b, d, dg, g, l, m, …) Consonants (b, d, f, g, k, l, m, …) All Sounds (consonants + vowels)

  24. Complementary Distribution Sibilants (s, z, sh, ch, dg, …) Voiced (b, d, dg, g, l, m, …) Consonants (b, d, f, g, k, l, m, …) All Sounds (consonants + vowels) *z

  25. Complementary Distribution Sibilants (s, z, sh, ch, dg, …) Voiced (b, d, dg, g, l, m, …) Consonants (b, d, f, g, k, l, m, …) All Sounds (consonants + vowels) *z s

  26. Complementary Distribution Sibilants (s, z, sh, ch, dg, …) Voiced (b, d, dg, g, l, m, …) Consonants (b, d, f, g, k, l, m, …) All Sounds (consonants + vowels) *z s z

  27. Allomorphy Example:Hungarian Present Tense 1sg

  28. Allomorphy Example:Hungarian Present Tense 1sg

  29. Allomorphy Example:Hungarian Present Tense 1sg

  30. Allomorphy Example:Hungarian Present Tense 1sg

  31. Allomorphy Example:Hungarian Present Tense 1sg

  32. Allomorphy Example:Hungarian Present Tense 1sg

  33. Allomorphy Example:Hungarian Present Tense 1sg All Vowels

  34. Allomorphy Example:Hungarian Present Tense 1sg All Vowels Front Vowels

  35. Allomorphy Example:Hungarian Present Tense 1sg All Vowels Front Vowels Front Rounded Vowels

  36. Allomorphy Example:Hungarian Present Tense 1sg All Vowels Front Vowels Front Rounded Vowels

  37. Allomorphy Example:Hungarian Present Tense 1sg All Vowels Front Vowels Front Rounded Vowels

  38. Allomorphy Example:Hungarian Present Tense 1sg All Vowels Front Vowels Front Rounded Vowels

  39. Features • Nouns

  40. Features • Nouns • number • singular, dual, plural • case • nominative, accusative, dative, … • gender/class • male, female, neuter • animate, inanimate, man-made object, shape, …

  41. Features • Verbs

  42. Features • Verbs • Person • first, second, third, third person far removed, … • Number • Tense • present, past, future, remote past, ... • Aspect • perfective, imperfective, habitual, repetitive, … • Mood • indicative, conditional, subjunctive (doubt or possibility), …

  43. Other Parts of Speech • Adjectives • Adverbs • Determiners and Specifiers

  44. Other Parts of Speech • Adjectives • Degree • positive, comparative, superlative, etc. • Number, Gender, Case • Adverbs • Degree, … • Determiners and Specifiers • Case • Who knows! • This is what Linguists try to elicit and categorize

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