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Morphology and Word Formation
kissed, freedom, stronger, follow, awe, goodness, talkative, teacher,
actor
.
2. Use the words above (and any other words that you think are rel-
evant) to answer the following questions:
a. Can a morpheme be represented by a single phoneme? Give ex-
amples. By more than one phoneme? Give examples.
b. Can a free morpheme be more than one syllable in length? Give
examples. Can a bound morpheme? Give examples.
c. Does the same letter or phoneme—or sequence of letters or pho-
nemes—always represent the same morpheme? Why or why not?
(Hint: you must refer to the definition of morpheme to be able to
answer this.)
d. Can the same morpheme be spelled differently? Give examples.
e. Can different morphemes be pronounced identically? Give examples.
f. A morpheme is basically the same as:
i. a letter
ii.
a sound
iii. a group of sounds
iv. none of the above
3. The words
district and
discipline show that the sequence of letters
d-i-s
does not always constitute a morpheme. (Analogous
examples are
Dostları ilə paylaş: