Aims of Morphology
- Identification of morphemes
- Study meaning of morphemes
- Assign meaning to parts of words
Example
*-ing on words such as jumping, running, borrowing, boxing.- Take the first example ‘jumping’
- Split it into two morphemes: one free morpheme (jump) and one bound morpheme (-ing)
- Once you identify that -ing is a bound morpheme for this word, we know that is the same for other words such as the examples given above (running, borrowing, boxing).
The purposes of studying morphology
The internal structure of words and the segmentation into different kinds of morphemes is essential to the two basic purposes or morphology:- the creation of new words and
- the modification of existing words.[1] We create new words out of old ones all the time. Here you can read more about how word creation is studied.
Morphology vs. Syntax
Grammar covers both morphology and syntax- Morphology: study of word forms
- Syntax: study of sentence structure
It is possible to have the syntax right, but the morphology wrong
Example using children’s language
- Children will usually use the correct syntactic constructions (Usually SVO), but use the wrong affix or insert one where it’s not needed
- `I felled over` vs `I fell over`
- Morphology is irregular: the past tense inflection `-ed` is found in words such as `walked`, `danced` and `jumped` but is not applied to all past tense constructions
Source : https://all-about-linguistics.group.shef.ac.uk/branches-of-linguistics/morphology/why-is-morphology-studied/
thanks boss
BalasHapus