D. V. Demidov
The notion of the word and its morphemic structure
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theoretical gr Deminov
6. The notion of the word and its morphemic structure.
It is very difficult to give a rigorous and at the same time universal definition to the word, i.e. such a definition as would unambiguously apply to all the different word-units of the lexicon. This difficulty is explained by the fact that the word is an extremely complex phenomenon. Within the framework of different linguistic theories the word is defined as the minimal potential sentence, the minimal free linguistic form, the elementary component of the sentence, the articulate sound- symbol, the grammatically arranged combination of sound with meaning, the meaningfully integral and immediately identifiable lingual unit, the uninterrupted string of morphemes, etc. None of these definitions, which can be divided into formal, functional, and mixed, has the power to precisely cover all the lexical segments of language without a residue remaining outside the field of definition. The said difficulties compel some linguists to refrain from accepting the word as the basic element of language. In particular, American scholar L. Bloomfield, recognised not the word and the sentence, but the phoneme and the morpheme as the basic categories of linguistic description, because these units are the easiest to be isolated in the continual text due to their ―physically‖ minimal character: the phoneme being the minimal formal segment of language, the morpheme, the minimal meaningful segment [15]. Accordingly, only two segmental levels were originally identified in language by Descriptive scholars: the phonemic level and the morphemic level; later on a third one was added to these – the level of ―constructions‖, i.e. the level of morphemic combinations. In fact, if we take such notional words as, say, water, pass, yellow and the like, as well as their simple derivatives, e.g.: watery, passer, yellowness, we shall easily see their definite nominative 39 function and unambiguous segmental delimitation, mak ing them beyond all doubt into ―separate words of language‖. But if we compare with the given one-stem words the corresponding composite formations, such as waterman, password, yellowback, we shall immediately note that the identification of the latter as separate words is much complicated by the fact that they themselves are decomposable into separate words. In traditional grammar, the study of the morphemic Download 2.8 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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