LING 323 Lecture Notes - Lecture 2: Loanword, Part Of Speech, Transfix
Document Summary
John d. alderete, linguistics 323, simon fraser university. Goals: this lecture is designed to provide additional concepts and tools for making observations about morphological systems. It gives a survey of the types of morphological processes found in the world"s languages and describes different concatenative and non-concatenative processes. Keywords: concatenative morphology, non-concatenative morphology, affixation, infixation, compounding; base modification/alternation, process-based morphology, reduplication, subtractive morphology. Assumption: complex words are created through dynamic processes; these processes operate on a specified input and produce a specified output. Definitions: concatenation: morphological process involving the combination of morphemes affixation: morphological process involving the attachment of an affix (prefix, suffix, infix, etc. ) From a little house" deniz denize denizin denizd kde. Definition: compounding, morphological process involving the concatenation of two roots or two stems. Illustration: english noun-noun compounds houseboat boathouse dogshow showdog. Task: provide the meanings for the above compound words.