On the one hand


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Bog'liq
a course in english grammar


with grammatical morphemes than prefixes are. The addition of a suffix to the root mostly changes the set of grammatical morphemes attached, which is not typical of prefixes. Cf. teach and teacher, on the one hand, give and forgive, on the other. In this respect lexico-grammatical word-morphemes resemble prefixes, not suffixes. 1
§ 16. Words without their grammatical morphemes (most­ly suffixes, often called endings or inflections) are known as stems. A stem may consist of the root alone, as in the words boy, rooms, moved, or it may be more complicated, as in boyish, remove, improvement.
We may say that the stem boyish- has been derived from the stem boy- by adding the suffix -ish, remove- from move-by means of the prefix re-.. In such cases we speak of stem-building by affixation. But affixation is not the only means of stem-building in English. The stem of the, noun strength has been derived from the stem of the adjective strong not only by affixation (the suffix -th) but also by vowel change (/a/ > /e/)-
§ 17. As already mentioned (§2), a word is not just a com­bination of morphemes. Apart from the naming power that unites all the morphemes of a word like revolutionary and turns them into a higher unit, they are also united by the word-stress which is an essential part of the structure of a word.
If we assume that the verb stem transport- has been derived from the noun stem transport-, we have to count stress change among the stem-building elements -of the verb.
§ 18. In accordance with their structure the following four types of stems are usually ^distinguished:.

  1. .Simple, containing only the root, as in day, dogs, write, wanted,' etc.

  2. tWjyativf, containing affixes or other stem-building elements, as in boyhood, rewrite, strength, speech (cf. speak) transport, etc.

1 Sec IO. A. >K i\ y k t e h k o. 0 TaK Ha3HBaeMux «cJioiKHbix rjia-rojiax* Tuna stand up b coBpeMennoM aurJinficKOM H3MKe. («Bonpocu
H3bIK03HaHHfl», 1954, Ns 5).
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3. Compound, containing two or more roots, as in white­
wash, pickpocket, appletree, motor-car, brother-in-law, etc.
Not e: The stems of blue-eyed, lion-hearted, etc. are both compound and derivative and are sometimes called "compound derivatives'.
4. Composite, containing, free lexico-grammatical word-
morphemes or otherwise haymg the form of a combination of
words, as in gxwe up, two/hundred and4wenty-five, at last, in •
spite of,
etc. * > r / '
/ I

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