inflectional morphology
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
- Noun:
- The part of grammar that deals with the inflections of words: Inflectional morphology is the study of how words change their form (inflect) to express grammatical categories such as tense, case, voice, aspect, person, number, gender, and mood, without changing the core meaning or the lexical category of the word.
Usage
- Inflectional morphology is a core subfield of linguistics. It contrasts with derivational morphology, which creates new words. The rules of inflectional morphology describe how to form plurals, past tenses, comparatives, possessives, and other grammatical forms.
Examples
- Noun:
- Understanding inflectional morphology is essential for analyzing how English forms the plural 'cats' from 'cat' or the past tense 'walked' from 'walk'.
- The course on inflectional morphology covered topics like verb conjugation and noun declension.
Advanced Usage
- Theoretical Perspective: In some theoretical frameworks, inflectional morphology is distinguished from syntax, focusing on word-internal structure, though the boundary can be debated (e.g., in the analysis of clitics).
- Language Comparison: Languages vary greatly in how much they use inflectional morphology. Languages like Latin or Russian are considered highly inflectional, while languages like English or Mandarin Chinese are considered less so or more analytic.
Variants and Related Words
- Inflection (n): The process or result of changing a word's form to express a grammatical function. (e.g., The inflection '-s' indicates third person singular present tense in verbs).
- Inflectional (adj): Relating to inflection or inflectional morphology. (e.g., The '-ed' suffix is an inflectional morpheme).
- Morphology (n): The study of the structure and form of words in a language.
- Derivational Morphology (n): The part of morphology concerned with the formation of new words, often changing the lexical category (e.g., creating the noun 'happiness' from the adjective 'happy').
Synonyms
- Inflectional system: The set of inflectional rules and patterns in a language.
- Grammar of word forms: A descriptive synonym focusing on the formal changes in words.
Related Concepts (Not Phrasal Verbs or Idioms)
- Paradigm: The complete set of inflected forms of a word (e.g., the verb paradigm: ).
- Morpheme: The smallest grammatical unit of meaning. Inflectional morphemes are a specific type.
- Agglutination: A morphological process where words are formed by stringing together morphemes, each with a distinct grammatical meaning, often relevant to the study of inflectional morphology.
Noun
- the part of grammar that deals with the inflections of words