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5 Morphology and Word Formation
key
concepts
Words and morphemes
Root, derivational, inflectional morphemes
Morphemes, allomorphs, morphs
Words
English
inflectional morphology
English derivational morphology
Compounding
Other sources of words
Registers and words
Internal
structure of complex words
Classifying words by their morphology
introduction
This chapter is about words—their relationships, their constituent parts,
and their internal organization. We believe that
this information will be of
value to anyone interested in words, for whatever reason; to anyone inter-
ested in dictionaries and how they represent the aspects of words we deal
with here; to anyone involved in developing the vocabularies of native and
non-native speakers of English; to anyone teaching
writing across the curric-
ulum who must teach the characteristics of words specific to their discipline;
to anyone teaching writing who must deal with the usage issues created by
the fact that different communities of English speakers use different word
forms, only one of which may be regarded as standard.
Exercise
1. Divide each of the following words into
their smallest meaningful
parts:
landholder, smoke-jumper, demagnetizability.
2. Each of the following sentences contains an error made by a non-
native speaker of English. In each, identify and correct the incorrect
word.
a. I am very relax here.
b. I am very boring with this game.
c. I am very satisfactory with my life.
d. Some flowers are very attracting to some insects.
e. Many people have very strong believes.
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f. My culture is very difference from yours.
g. His grades proof that he is a hard worker.
h. The T-shirt that China drawing. (from
a T-shirt package from
China)
In general terms, briefly discuss what English language learners must
learn in order to avoid such errors.
3. Some native speakers of English use forms such as
seen instead
of
saw, come instead of
came, aks instead of
ask, clumb instead of
climbed,
drug instead of
dragged, growed instead of
grew. Are these
errors? If they are, are they the same kinds of errors made by the non-
native speakers of English listed in Exercise 2? If not, what are they?