D. V. Demidov
The concept of the morpheme and its structural
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5. The concept of the morpheme and its structural
types. The morpheme is the elementary meaningful lingual unit built up from phonemes and used to make words. It has meaning, but its meaning is abstract, significative, not concrete, or nominative, as is that of the word [2, р. 12]. Morphemes constitute the words; they do not exist outside the words. Studying the morpheme we actually study the word: its inner structure, its functions, and the ways it enters speech. Stating the differences between the word and the morpheme, we have to admit that the correlation between the word and the morpheme is problematic. The borderlines between the morpheme and the word are by no means rigid and there is a set of intermediary units (half-words – half- morphemes), which form an area of transitions between the word and the morpheme as 33 the polar phenomena. This includes the so-called ―morpheme- like‖ functional, or auxiliary words, for example, auxiliary verbs and adverbs, articles, particles, prepositions and conj unctions: they are realized as isolated, separate units (their separateness being fixed in written practice) but perform various grammatical functions; in other words, they function like morphemes and are dependent semantically to a greater or lesser extent. E.g..: Jack‟s, a boy, have done. This approach to treating various lingual units is known in linguistics as ―a field approach‖: polar phenomena possessing the unambiguous characteristic features of the opposed units constitute ―the core‖, or ―the center‖ of the field, while the intermediary phenomena combining some of the characteristics of the poles make up ―the periphery‖ of the field; e.g.: functional words make up the periphery of the class of words since their functioning is close to the functioning of morphemes. When studying morphemes, we should distinguish morphemes as generalized lingual units from their concrete manifestations, or variants in specific textual environments; variants of morphemes are called ―allo-morphs‖. Initially, the so-called allo-emic theory was developed in phonetics: in phonetics, phonemes, as the generalized, invariant phonological units, are distinguished from their concrete realizations, the allophones. For example, one phoneme is pronounced in a different way in differe nt environments, e.g.: you [ju:] – you know [ju]; in Russian, vowels are also pronounced in a different way in stressed and unstressed syllables, e.g.: дом – домой. The same applies to the morpheme, which is a generalized unit, an invariant, and may be represented by different variants, allo- morphs, in different textual environments. For example, the morpheme of the plural, -(e)s, sounds differently after voiceless consonants (bats), voiced consonants and vowels (rooms), and 34 after fricative and sibilant consonants (clashes). So, [s], [z], [iz], which are united by the same meaning (the grammatical meaning of the plural), are allo- morphs of the same morpheme, which is represented as -(e)s in written speech. The ―allo-emic theory‖ in the study of morphemes was also developed within the framework of Descriptive Linguistics by means of the so-called distributional analysis: in the first stage of distributional analysis a syntagmatic chain of lingual units is divided into meaningful segments, morphs, e.g.: he/ start/ed/ laugh/ing/; then the recurrent segments are analyzed in various textual environments, and the following three types of distribution are established: contrastive distribution, non-contrastive Download 0.73 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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