Lecture 2: What’s in a word? Morphological structure of the word

1.  The Problems of the Definition of the Word

2.  Lexemes and Words

3.  Lexical and Grammatical Words

4.  Morphological Structure of the Word

1. The Problems of the Definition of the Word

The definition of the word is one of the most formidable tasks in linguistics because the simplest word has many different aspects. It has a sound form because it is a certain arrangement of phonemes; it has its morphological structure, being also a certain arrangements of morphemes; when used in actual speech, it may occur in different word forms and signal different meanings. Being the central element of any language system, the word is a sort of focus for the problems of phonology, syntax, morphology, philosophy, psychology. Many scholars attempted to define the word. Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679), one of the greatest English philosophers, revealed a materialistic approach to the problem of nomination when he wrote that words are not mere sounds but names of matter. The Russian physiologist LP. Pavlov (1849-1936) examined the word in connection with his studies of the second signal system and defined it as a universal signal that can substitute any other signal from the environment in evoking a response in a human organism. Within the scope of linguistics the word has been defined syntactically, semantically, phonologically, and by combining different approaches. H. Sweet put forward a syntactical approach defining the word as the minimum sentence. L. Bloomfield defined the word structurally as a minimum free form. E. Sapir takes into consideration the syntactic and semantic aspects when he calls the word one of the smallest completely satisfying bits of isolated meaning, into which the sentence resolves itself. E. Sapir also points out one more, very important characteristic of the word, its indivisibility. For example, a lion will be a word-group, alive is a word which is indivisible. A purely semantic treatment is found in Stephen Ullmann 's explanation which runs that words are meaningful units.

The eminent French linguist A. Meillet (1866-1936) combines the three approaches and gives the following definition: A word is defined by the association of a given meaning with a given group of sounds susceptible of a given grammatical employment. The word is a fundamental unit of language. It is a dialectical unity of form and content. Summing our review of different definitions, we come to the conclusion that they are bound to be strongly dependent upon the line of approach, the aim the scholar has in view. For a comprehensive word theory a description seems more appropriate than a definition. The problems to define a word still exist:

•  Orthographic, free-form or stress-based definitions of a word make sense, but there are many words that do not fit these categories, e.g., will not- two words; cannot - one word; postbox, post box, post-box - different variants of spelling;

•  Words are units of meaning, but the definition of a word having a clear-cut meaning creates numerous exceptions and emerges as vague and asymmetrical. Stability of a word is stressed. A word is a word if it can stand on its own as a reply to a question or as a statement or exclamation, e.g., Shoot! Goal! Yes. There. Up. Taxi! If we reduce the word Shoot to Sh, it would depend on the other word for its sense.

•  We have different forms but different forms do not necessarily count as different words, e.g., bring, brings, brought, bringing - are not separate words, otherwise we would expect to find each word separately in a dictionary.

•  Words can have the same forms but also different and, in some cases, completely unrelated meanings, e.g., mug.

•  The existence of idioms seems to upset attempts to define words in
any neat formal way, e.g., to rain cats and dogs; to kick the bucket. - Is it raining hard? - Cats and dogs. They involve several orthographic letters but cannot be further reduced without the loss of meaning.

A word is an autonomous unit of the language in which a particular meaning is associated with a particular sound complex capable of a particular grammatical employment and able to form a sentence by itself.

2. Lexemes and Words

A lexeme is the abstract unit which underlies some of the variants we have observed in connection with 'words'. Thus, bring is the lexeme which underlies some of the variants bring, brings, brought, bringing which are the word-forms. Lexemes are the basic, contrasting units of vocabulary in a language. When we flick through words in a dictionary we are looking up lexemes rather than words. The lexeme bring is an abstraction. It doesn't occur in texts in this particular form, but realizes different forms. The term lexeme is also connected with more than one word-form expressed by such lexical items as:

Multi-word verbs, e.g., to catch up with;

Phrasal verbs, e.g., to clear up, to switch off;

Idioms, e.g., kick the bucket.

Lexemes help to represent polysemantic words through individual words, e.g., fair (n), fair (adj. in good, acceptable), fair (adj. light in colour, especially of hair).

Lexical items or vocabulary items are terms which help to avoid ambiguity in the term word, especially when it becomes limited to by orthography.

3. Lexical and Grammatical Words

There is a distinction between lexical words and grammatical words.

Lexical words known as full words or content words include nouns, adjectives, verbs, adverbs. They carry a higher information content and are syntactically structured by the grammatical words. Lexical words form an open class of words because they are subject to diachronic change, changes in form and meaning over a period of time.

Nouns

A noun is a naming word (the name of a person, place, or thing). Most nouns inflect for the morphosyntactic category of number and, as such, have a plural form like -s or -es, e.g., bee – bees, bush – bushes, video – videos, tomato – tomatoes, match – matches. Some words make their plural forms the other way, e.g., foot – feet, goose – geese, mouse – mice, child – children. Other nouns never change their singular forms to make their plurals, e.g., deer – deer, sheep – sheep. Some nouns never occur without the plural marker, e.g., scissors, trousers, jeans, shorts.

Most nouns appear with either an indefinite article a, or a definite article the. Consider the following list of nouns and divide them into the following groups: nouns that can take a (an), nouns that can take the, nouns that have a plural form, and nouns that can refer to things that can be counted. Some nouns will appear in more than one category.

a (an) / the / plural / countable
butter
video
fame
anger
worker
Peter
mouse
London

All nouns fall into three groups: those which appear in all four groups, those which appear in only one group, those which appear in some groups. The nouns which appear in all four groups are called countable, those which appear in only one are called uncountable.

Adjectives

Adjectives denote a property or quality of an object. They may take grammatical forms and represent degrees of comparison: positive, comparative, superlative, e.g., big - bigger - the biggest; difficult - more difficult -the most difficult.

Consider the following list of adjectives and divide them into three groups: those which take the -er and -est endings, those which take more or most, and those which take neither of the above.

-er, -est / more, most / neither
narrow
ugly
absolute
high
painful

The adjectives that have comparative and superlative degrees are called gradable. Those that do not have comparative and superlative degrees are called non-gradable.

Adjectives in English may appear either before a noun or after a form of the verb to be, e.g., the ripe peach, the peach is ripe. Not all adjectives appear in both positions. Some may only appear before nouns, while others appear only after the verb to be.

Consider the following list of adjectives. Which may appear only before a noun, which may appear only after the verb to be, and which may appear in both positions?

before nouns / after the verb to be / both
older
elder
red
incredible
ill
hungry
afraid

Verbs

There are two classes of verbs - lexical and auxiliary verbs. Verbs denote actions or states. Each verb has five associated grammatical words, e.g., ask - asks - asked - asking – asked; go — goes — went - going — gone

Verbs like ask are regular, they form the majority of verbs in English. Irregular verbs, like go have different forms. There are about 200 irregular verbs in English.

Adverbs

There are two classes of adverbs: degree and general. Degree adverbs are a small group of words like very, more, and most. They always appear with either an adjective or a general adverb, e.g., She cooks very well. She cooks very. This picture is more beautiful. This picture is more.

General adverbs constitute a large class and may appear without a degree adverb, e.g., She cooks well. Adverbs denote degree, manner, place, time. Adverbs have no inflected forms, they take comparisons like adjectives.

Grammatical words known as functional words, functors, empty words comprise a small class of words that includes pronouns, articles, auxiliary verbs, prepositions, conjunctions. Grammatical words constitute a closed class, because these words remain generally immutable.

Prepositions

Prepositions are words such as in, out, on, by, which often indicate locations in time or space, or direction. While nouns, adjectives, verbs, and adverbs are members of open classes because the classes they belong to are very large, and while it is possible to add new items to any one of these open classes, prepositions are members of a closed class. Other closed classes of words are conjunctions, for example, and, but, because, or; determiners, for example, a, an, the, these, those; and the class of auxiliary verbs. It is not possible to add new members to the closed classes.

4. Morphological Structure of the Word

The term morphology, which literally means "the study of forms", was originally used in biology, but, since the middle of the nineteenth century, has also been used to describe the type of investigation that analyzes all those basic elements used in the language known as morphemes.

A morpheme is the smallest meaningful unit of speech, an association of a given meaning with a given sound pattern. But unlike a word it is not autonomous. Morphemes occur in speech as constituent parts of words, not independently. A word may consist of a single morpheme or contain several, e.g., cat — cats; inexpensive; in- distinguish-able; antidisestablishmentarianism.

Morphemes may have different phonetic shapes. In the word-cluster please, pleasing, pleasure, pleasant the root morpheme is represented by the phonetic shapes. All the representations of the given morpheme are called allomorphs or morphemic variants.

Thus, an allomorph is defined as a positional variant of a morpheme occurring in a specific environment and characterized by complementary distribution. Allomorphs also occur among prefixes. Their form may depend on the initial letters with which they will assimilate, e.g. in: im occurs before bilabials - impossible; ir occurs before г - irregular; il occurs before 1 - illegal; in occurs before other consonants and vowels - inability, indirect.

Morphemes can be classified from the semantic point of view and from the structural point of view.

Semantically morphemes fall into two types: 1) root morphemes and 2) non-root morphemes.

Root and non-root morphemes are generally easily distinguished and the difference between them is clearly felt as in the words helpless, handy, blackness, Londoner, refill. The root-morphemes help, hand, black, London, fill are understood as the lexical centers of the words, as the basic constituent part of a word without which the word is inconceivable. The root-morpheme is the lexical nucleus of a word, has an individual lexical meaning shared by no other morpheme of the language. The root-morpheme is isolated as the morpheme common to a set of words making up a word-cluster, e.g., teach in to teach, teacher, teaching. It is the ultimate constituent element which remains after the removal of all functional and derivational affixes and doesn't admit any further analysis. It is the common element of words in a word-family, e.g., heart - hearten, heartify, heartless, sweet- heart, heart-broken, kind-hearted, whole-heartedly.

Non-root morphemes include inflectional morphemes (inflections) and affixational morphemes (affixes). Inflections carry only grammatical meaning, they build different forms of one and the same word, e.g., near, nearer, nearest. Affixes supply the stem with components of lexical and lexico-grammatical meaning. They are classified into prefixes and suffixes.

A suffix is a derivational morpheme following the stem and forming a new derivative in a different part of speech or a different word class, e.g., -en, -y, -less in hearten, hearty, heartless. A prefix is a derivational morpheme standing before the root and modifying meaning, e.g., to hearten - to dishearten.

Structurally morphemes fall into free morphemes, bound morphemes, semi-free (semi-bound morphemes).

A free morpheme is defined as one that coincides with the stem or a word-form. A great many root-morphemes are free morphemes, e.g., friend in the noun friendship is naturally qualified as a free morpheme because it coincides with one of the forms of the noun friend.