morpheme

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morpheme
morpheme Linguistics. (ˈmɔːfiːm) [F. morphème, f. Gr. µορϕή form, after phonème phoneme.] a. An element such as an affix, preposition, conjunction, or stress pattern considered in respect of its functional relations in a linguistic system (now little used by linguists). b. The smallest meaningful mo... Oxford English Dictionary
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English: entire [morpheme?] | WordReference Forums
Nov 12, 2023In entire the en- part doesn't have any sense of "put in, put on, turn into, or cause", as it has in the above examples, and the -tire part has no semantic resemblance to English words tire. For me there is no sense that this is a compound of morphemes, not even French or Latin morphemes. Even knowing the Latin origin of entire, I can't see two ...
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Content morpheme
A content morpheme or contentive morpheme is a root that forms the semantic core of a major class word. By adding the suffix -ful (another functional morpheme), the adjective beautiful is formed. wikipedia.org
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morpheme
morpheme/ˈmɔ:fi:m; `mɔrfim/ n(linguistics 语言) smallest meaningful unit into which a word can be divided 词素 `Run-s' contains two morphemes and `un-like-ly' contains three. run-s含有两个词素, un-like-ly含有三个词素. 牛津英汉双解词典
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Functional morpheme
A functional morpheme (as opposed to a content morpheme) is a morpheme which simply modifies the meaning of a word, rather than supplying the root meaning Functional morpheme are generally considered a closed class, which means that new functional morphemes cannot normally be created. wikipedia.org
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Definition and Examples of Morphemes in English - ThoughtCo
For example, the regular noun plural ending has two spellings (-s and -es) and three pronunciations (an s-sound as in backs, a z-sound as in bags, and a vowel plus z-sound as in batches). Similarly, when the morpheme -ate is followed by -ion (as in activate-ion ), the t of -ate combines with the i of -ion as the sound 'sh' (so we might spell ...
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Can compound words like 「外食」be considered as a morpheme? According to Wikipedia, > In linguistics, a morpheme is the smallest grammatical unit in a language. In other words, it is the smallest meaningful unit of a la...
That alone is enough to say that it cannot be a morpheme. An example of a bound morpheme in Japanese, by the way, would be the modifier (the one you see in ).
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meaning of the name "Dictyostelium discoideum" _Dictyostelium discoideum_ is a well-known species of slime mould. Does anyone know what the name means? Here's my best guess. I found the 1935 article in which it was ...
I think your analysis is correct. _Dictyostelium_ generally means net-like pillar. _Dictyo_ references a net or mesh, and stele originates from the Greek _stēlē_ : to stand or pillar. However, as you point out, "stele" is also the word for the central vascular tissue in vascular plants. The stele ca...
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Bound and free morphemes
morpheme (or unbound morpheme) is one that can stand alone. A bound morpheme is a type of bound form, and a free morpheme is a type of free form. wikipedia.org
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Floating tone
A floating tone is a morpheme or element of a morpheme that contains neither consonants nor vowels, but only tone. For example, in Okphela, an Edoid language of Nigeria, the main negative morpheme is distinguished from the present tense morpheme by tone; the present wikipedia.org
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Language Log » Morpheme(s) of the Year
jìshùkòng 技术控 ("tech complex") By extension, kòng 控 as a suffix signifying "-complex" can now also be used in the sense of "fan /-phile / maniac". Thus: m ànhuàkòng 漫画控 ("comic book fan") — a very Japanese expression (for those who know their manga)!
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Kanji with long あー sound Although the long sound occurs in many words written in katakana, and in some onomatopoeia and interjections (, , etc.) it seems to be very rare in words written with kanji. The only example ...
First, it'll be very marginal, at least the long is impossible to appear in classic onyomi (, , ) series and "regular" native words. is like "mom" as opposed to "mother", and you can see these kind of words rarely get an established kanji. Below is the all results I get through prefix search on a J-...
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"Lexeme" 和 "Morpheme" 和有什么不一样? | HiNative
LexemeGood question! Lexeme = a word + all the forms of a word Examples: - go, goes, going, gone, went ... these are all FORMS of the lexeme "go" - find, finding, found, finds ... these are all forms of the lexeme "find" - door, doors ... forms of the lexeme "door" Morpheme = the smallest part of a word that has its own meaning. You can often combine morphemes to make new words.
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Isolating language
In the extreme case, each word contains a single morpheme. This word has a 3:1 morpheme per word ratio. On average, words in English have a morpheme per word ratio substantially greater than one. wikipedia.org
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Relation between -ますよ and -ましょう They sound alike. Are they cognate historically? Morphologically, is in both cases a particle or part of the morpheme in -?
The short answer to your initial question is no. The historical/etymological spelling of was , which is the expected form of the volitional, since the irrealis () stem of is . Regular sound change explains the rest: becomes . The same story applies to the consonant-stem () verbs: the old spelling fo...
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