D. V. Demidov
Download 2.8 Kb. Pdf ko'rish
|
theoretical gr Deminov
structure of the word is based on two criteria: the positional
criterion – the location of the morphemes with regard to each other, and the semantic (or functional) criterion – the contribution of the morphemes to the general meaning of the word. According to these criteria morphemes are divided into root-morphemes (roots) and affixal morphemes (affixes). Roots express the concrete, ―material‖ part of the meaning of the word and constitute its central part. Affixes express the specificational part of the meaning of the word: they specify, or transform the meaning of the root. Affixal specification may be of two kinds: of lexical or grammatical character. So, according to the semantic criterion affixes are further subdivided into lexical, or word- building (derivational) affixes, which together with the root constitute the stem of the word, and grammatical, or word- changing affixes, expressing different morphological categories, such as number, case, tense and others. With the help of lexical affixes new words are derived, or built; with the help of grammatical affixes the form of the word is changed. According to the positional criterion affixes are divided into prefixes, situated before the root in the word, e.g.: under- estimate, and suffixes, situated after the root, e.g.: underestim-ate. Prefixes in English are only lexical: the word underestimate is derived from the word estimate with the help of the prefix under-. Suffixes in English may be either lexical or grammatical; e.g. in the 40 word underestimates -ate is a lexical suffix, because it is used to derive the verb estimate (v) from the noun esteem (n), and –s is a grammatical suffix making the 3rd person, singular form of the verb to underestimate. Grammatical suffixes are also called inflexions (inflections, inflectional endings). Grammatical suffixes in English have certain peculiarities, which make them different from inflections in other languages: since they are the remnants of the old inflectional system, there are few (only six) remaining word-changing suffixes in English: -(e)s, -ed, -ing, -er, -est, -en; most of them are homonymous, e.g.: -(e)s is used to form the plural of the noun (dogs), the genitive of the noun (my friend‘s), and the 3rd person singular of the verb (works); some of them have lost their inflectional properties and can be attached to units larger than the word, e.g.: his daughter Mary‟s arrival. That is why the term ―inflection‖ is seldom used to denote the grammatical components of words in English. Grammatical suffixes form word-changing, or morphological paradigms of words, which can be observed to their full extent in inflectional langua ges, such as Russian, e.g.: стол – стола – столу – столом - о столе; morphological paradigms exist, though not on the same scale, in English too, e.g., the number paradigm of the noun: boy – boys. Lexical affixes are primarily studied by lexicology with regard to the meaning which they contribute to the general meaning of the whole word. In grammar word-building suffixes are studied as the formal marks of the words belonging to different parts of speech; they form lexical (word-building, derivational) paradigms of words united by a common root, e.g.: to decide – decision – decisive – decisively to incise – incision – incisive – incisively Being the formal marks of words of different parts of speech, word-building suffixes are also grammatically relevant. 41 But grammar study is primarily concerned with grammatical, word-changing, or functional affixes, because they change the word according to its grammatical categories. Summing up what has been said above, we may point out some of the properties of the morpheme and the word which are fundamental from the point of view of their systemic status and therefore require detailed investigations and descriptions. The morpheme is a meaningful segmental component of the word; the morpheme is formed by phonemes; as a meaningful component of the word it is elementary (i.e. indivisible into smaller segments as regards its significative function). The word is a nominative unit of language; it is formed by morphemes; it enters the lexicon of language as its elementary component (i.e. a component indivisible into smaller segments as regards its nominative function); together with other nominative units the word is used for the formation of the sentence – a unit of information in the communication process. Download 2.8 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
Ma'lumotlar bazasi mualliflik huquqi bilan himoyalangan ©fayllar.org 2024
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling