bound morpheme उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
- The etymology of the word misspell is the affix " mis-" plus the root " spell ", their bound morpheme has two consecutive s's, one of which is often erroneously omitted.
- While " vue " may be able to stand as its own word, " acu " is seen as a prefix or a bound morpheme that must connect to a free morpheme like " vue ."
- A purely isolating language would lack any visible morphology, since no word would have an internal compositional structure in terms of word pieces ( i . e . morphemes ) thus it would lack bound morphemes like affixes.
- According to Matrix Language Frame Model, Cantonese, as the matrix language, contributes bound morphemes, content and function words, whereas, English, the embedded language, contributes lexical, phrases or compound words.
- It contains definite synthetic features, such as the bound morphemes mark tense, number ( plurality ), gender etc . However, though Odia language has a larger number of derivational affixes, it has virtually no inflectional morphology.
- Punctuation marks indicate the type of affix a particular bound morpheme is; for example, hyphens mark prefixes and suffixes, and " " is an infix that is placed between the first consonant and the first vowel of a root word.
- The inflected form of a word often contains both one or more free morphemes ( a unit of meaning which can stand by itself as a word ), and one or more bound morphemes ( a unit of meaning which cannot stand alone as a word ).
- Then, the individual syllables and corresponding characters are used only in that word, and while they can be interpreted as bound morphemes t?" h?" and v?"-di? " it is more commonly considered a single disyllabic morpheme.
- Linguistic theories generally regard human languages as consisting of two parts : a lexicon, essentially a catalogue of a language's words ( its Dictionaries represent attempts at listing, in alphabetical order, the lexicon of a given language; usually, however, bound morphemes are not included.
- Cranberry morphemes are a special form of bound morpheme whose independent meaning has been displaced and serves only to distinguish one word from another, like in " cranberry, " in which the free morpheme " berry " is preceded by the bound morpheme " cran-, " meaning " crane " from the earlier name for the berry, " crane berry ".