"Inflectional derivational morphology" Essays and Research Papers

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    M a from Ignou

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    Master’s Degree in English ASSIGNMENT 2011-12 (For July 2011 and January 2012 sessions) Compulsory Courses of M.A. English - 1" Year) British Poetry-01 British Drama-02 British Novel43 Aspects of Language-04 School of Humanities Indira Gandhi National Open University Maidan Garhi‚ New Delhi- 110 068 Master’s Degree in English Assignments for I st year Compulsory Courses Course Code: MEG Dear Student. This booklet contains all the assignments of the Compulsory Courses of MA (English) I

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    during the colonial period‚ when the speakers of a “dominant” European language came in contact with indigenous African and Asian languages (Jenkins‚ 2003). The Pidgin form of a “regular language” is greatly simplified and reduced in phonology‚ morphology‚ grammar and vocabulary. For example‚ English-based pidgins may have as few as five vowels‚ may lose all English inflections and may have vocabularies as small as a thousand words. (Millward‚ Hayes‚ 2011). Pidgin grammars tend to be shallow‚ without

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    CONTENTS Introduction……………………………………………………….3 Chapter I. Word-formation and its basic peculiarities……….……5 1.1. Affixation in the English language……………………..…….7 1.2. Degree of derivation…….…………………………...……….7 1.3.Homonymic derivational affixes……………………...……..18 Chapter II. Prefixation in the English language…………………28 2.1. Prefixation. Some debatable problems………………...……28 2.2. Classification of prefixes…………………………..………..33 2.3. Productive and non-productive word building

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    biscuit for cookie)‚ the students are adapting their understanding of a cookie to create a whole new label for the same object. 11. The answer to the question‚ “Which of the following is a derivational suffix?‚” is al because the other three options-- ing‚ ly‚ & est—are inflectional endings‚ but the derivational suffix al changes the meaning function‚ if not the part of speech‚ of the word it is attached to. 16. The answer to the question‚

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    Morphosyntax

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    According to BAUER (1997)‚ give a brief explanation of the grammatical features which would account for derivational morphology. Use examples: 1. Forms which share a base type: there are series of related morphological forms which share the same base or a base type. Ex: national‚ nationalize‚ nationalistic‚ nationality. 2. Semantic links among forms: members of a paradigm are related by anything other than the meaning of the base. Ex: forms ending in –ist and –ism . There is a set in which

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    Parts of speech

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    Parts of Speech In grammar‚ a part of speech (also a word class‚ a lexical class‚ or a lexical category) is a linguistic category of words (or more precisely lexical items)‚ which is generally defined by the syntactic or morphological behavior of the lexical item in question. Common linguistic categories include noun and verb‚ among others. There are open world classes which constantly acquire new members‚ and closed word classes‚ which acquire new members infrequently if at all. Almost all languages

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    Arnold

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    И. В. АРНОЛЬД Лексикология современного английского языка Издание третье‚ переработанное и дополненное Допущено Министерством высшего и среднего специального образования СССР в качестве учебника для студентов институтов и факультетов иностранных языков Сканирование‚ распознавание‚ проверка: Аркадий Куракин (ark # mksat. net)‚ сен-2004. Орфография унифицирована к британской. Пропущены страницы: 50-53‚ 134-139‚ 152-161‚ 164-171‚ 201-202‚ 240-243 ББК 81.2 Англ-923 А 84

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    AMERICAN AND BRITISH ENGLISH Lexical and grammatical differences LEXICAL DIFFERENCES • Vocab – most noticeable differences • Differ in: – total meaning OR – in one particular sense of usage OR – totally unknown in some varieties REASONS FOR VOCABULARY DIFFERENCES i) New objects & experiences encountered in N. America - new names – adapt or neulogism (i.e. create new word‚ expression or usage) e.g. corn (US); maize (UK) robin  small red-breasted (Eng.) large red-breasted (US)

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    I watched the movie Million Dollar Arm and I choose the character JB to do morphological analysis of some of his dialogues from the movie. At first‚ to do morphological analysis we need to know what is morpheme? A morpheme is the smallest unit of or the smallest piece of a word that contributes meaning to a word. Example: The word ‘management’ has 2 morphemes in it manage-ment. Some words have just one morpheme like ‘destined’. All morphemes are either free or bound. Free: A free morpheme is

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    Applied Linguistics

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    IFL A4.2 (2011-2012) Chapter 1: What is Language? - - .b lo gs po t.c om - Language can be viewed as a social fact‚ as a psychological state (mental dictionary)‚ as a set of structures (a grammatical system: a system to what orders the words have to come in if they are to make sense)‚ or as a collection of outputs (utterances/sentences: spoken or written). Language can be viewed as a set of choices (different ways of saying a sentence)‚ a set of contrasts (an inversion

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