Depending on what subject you’re studying, morphology can mean different things. In linguistics, morphology is the study of word formation, words, and how words relate to each other in a language.
*-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 ...
Introduction to morphology -- The identification of morphemes -- Types of morphemes -- The distribution of morphemes -- Structural classes -- The meaning of morphemes and sequences of morphemes -- ...
The verbal morphemes in the Papuan language Nimboran are rigidly ordered; moreover, morphemes with identical ordering properties are in complementary distribution. This suggests that verbal morphemes ...
Misty Adoniou is a Principal Fellow at the University of Melbourne and an adjunct Associate Professor at the University of Canberra. She is the author of the Cambridge University Press book 'Spelling ...
The paper aims to investigate the real size of the minimal prosodic stem/word in Malawian Tonga (popularly known as ciTonga), a Southern Bantu language spoken in Malawi. At the surface level, it is ...
Morphologist and Professor at The State University of New York at Stony Brook. 2005: President of The Linguistic Society of America. Research explores almost all aspects of Morphology and its ...