D. V. Demidov
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participle of verbs; 3) the segments -ing: the gerund and present participle; 4) the segments -er, -est: the comparative and superlative degrees of adjectives and adverbs. The auxiliary word- morphemes of various standings should be interpreted in this connection as ―semi-bound‖ morphemes, since, being used as separate elements of speech strings, they form categorial unities with their notional stem- words. On the basis of formal presentation, ―overt‖ morphemes and ―covert‖ morphemes are distinguished. Overt morphemes are genuine, explicit morphemes building up words; the covert morpheme is identified as a contrastive absence of morpheme expressing a certain function. The notion of covert morpheme 36 coincides with the notion of zero morpheme in the oppositional description of grammatical categories. For instance, the word- form clocks consists of two overt morphemes: one lexical (root) and one grammatical expressing the plural. The outwardly one-morpheme word- form clock, since it expresses the singular, is also considered as consisting of two morphemes, i.e. of the overt root and the co\ert (implicit) grammatical suffix of the singular. The usual symbol for the covert morpheme employed by linguists is the sign of the empty set: 0. On the basis of segmental relation, ―segmental‖ morphemes and ―supra-segmental‖ morphemes are distinguished. Interpreted as supra-segmental morphemes in distributional terms are intonation contours, accents, pauses. The said elements of language should be considered signemic units of language, since they are functionally bound. They form the secondary line of speech, accompanying its primary phonemic line. On the other hand, from what has been stated about the morpheme proper, it is not difficult to see that the morphemic interpretation of suprasegmental units can hardly stand to reason. Indeed, these units are functionally connected not with morphemes, but with larger elements of language: words, word-groups, sentences, supra-sentential constructions. On the basis of grammatical alternation, ―additive‖ morphemes and ―replacive‖ morphemes are distinguished. Interpreted as additive morphemes are outer grammatical suffixes, since, as a rule, they are opposed to the absence of morphemes in grammatical alternation. E.g:. look+ed; small+er, etc. In distinction to these, the root phonemes of grammatical interchange are considered as replacive morphemes, since they replace one another in the paradigmatic forms. E.g.: dr- i-ve – dr- o-ve – dr- i-ven; m-a- n – m-e-n; etc. 37 It should be remembered that the phonemic interchange is unproductive in English as in all the Indo-European languages. If it were productive, it might rationally be interpreted as a sort of replacive ―infixation‖ (correlated with ―exfixation‖ of the additive type). As it stands, however, this type of grammatical means can be understood as a kind of suppletivity (i.e. partial suppletivity). On the basis of linear characte ristic, ―continuous‖ (or ―linear‖) morphemes and ―discontinuous‖ morphemes are distinguished. By the discontinuous morpheme, opposed to the, continuous morpheme, a two-element grammatical unit is meant which is identified in the analytical grammatical form comprising an auxiliary word and a grammatical suffix. These two elements, as it were, embed the notional stem; hence, they are symbolically represented as follows: be ... ing – for the continuous verb forms (e.g.: is going); have ... en – for the perfect verb forms (e.g.: has gone); be ... en – for the passive verb forms (e.g.: is taken) Many of the distributional morpheme types contradict the traditional definition of the morpheme: traditionally the morpheme is the smallest meaningful lingual unit (this is contradicted by the ―empty‖ morphemes type), built up by phonemes (this is contradicted by the ―supra-segmental‖ morphemes type), used to build up words (this is contradicted by the ―discontinuous‖ morphemes type). This is due to the fact that in Descriptive Linguistics only three lingual units are distinguished: the phoneme, the morpheme, and syntactic constructions; the notion of the word is rejected because of the difficulties of defining it. Still, the classification of distributional morpheme types can be used to summarize and differentiate various types of word-building and word-changing, though not all of them are morphemic in the current mainstream understanding of the term ―morpheme‖. |
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