321 chapter 3 morphology: the words of language (71-114) powerpoint by don l. f. nilsen to accompany...

32
32 1 CHAPTER 3 MORPHOLOGY: THE WORDS OF LANGUAGE (71-114) PowerPoint by Don L. F. Nilsen PowerPoint by Don L. F. Nilsen to accompany to accompany An Introduction to Language An Introduction to Language (8e, (8e, 2007) 2007) by Victoria Fromkin, Robert Rodman by Victoria Fromkin, Robert Rodman and Nina Hyams and Nina Hyams

Upload: jared-phillips

Post on 17-Dec-2015

220 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 321 CHAPTER 3 MORPHOLOGY: THE WORDS OF LANGUAGE (71-114) PowerPoint by Don L. F. Nilsen to accompany An Introduction to Language (8e, 2007) by Victoria

32 1

CHAPTER 3MORPHOLOGY:

THE WORDS OF LANGUAGE(71-114)

PowerPoint by Don L. F. NilsenPowerPoint by Don L. F. Nilsento accompany to accompany

An Introduction to LanguageAn Introduction to Language (8e, 2007) (8e, 2007)by Victoria Fromkin, Robert Rodman by Victoria Fromkin, Robert Rodman

and Nina Hyamsand Nina Hyams

Page 2: 321 CHAPTER 3 MORPHOLOGY: THE WORDS OF LANGUAGE (71-114) PowerPoint by Don L. F. Nilsen to accompany An Introduction to Language (8e, 2007) by Victoria

32 2

CONTENT WORDS VS. FUNCTION WORDS

You may have been told that there are eight Parts of Speech in English.

You may have been told that their names are: Nouns, Verbs, Adjectives, Adverbs, Pronouns, Articles, Auxiliary Verbs and Expletives.

(Fromkin Rodman Hyams 74-76)

Page 3: 321 CHAPTER 3 MORPHOLOGY: THE WORDS OF LANGUAGE (71-114) PowerPoint by Don L. F. Nilsen to accompany An Introduction to Language (8e, 2007) by Victoria

32 3

What your teachers told you is not a lie, but it is very much an oversimplification.

These Part-of-Speech Categories need to be divided into two very different types of Parts of Speech.

The Content Words carry real-world meaning.

The Function words carry only grammatical meaning.

(Fromkin Rodman Hyams 74-76)

Page 4: 321 CHAPTER 3 MORPHOLOGY: THE WORDS OF LANGUAGE (71-114) PowerPoint by Don L. F. Nilsen to accompany An Introduction to Language (8e, 2007) by Victoria

32 4

The Content Words are Nouns, Verbs, Adjectives and Adverbs.

The Function Words are Articles, Auxiliary Verbs and Expletives.

(Fromkin Rodman Hyams 74-76)

The Pronouns belong to neither of these categories. Pronouns can stand in the place of Nouns, Verbs, Adverbs, Prepositional Phrases, or even Sentences.

Page 5: 321 CHAPTER 3 MORPHOLOGY: THE WORDS OF LANGUAGE (71-114) PowerPoint by Don L. F. Nilsen to accompany An Introduction to Language (8e, 2007) by Victoria

32 5

Since Content Words carry real-world meaning:

Content words can be stressed.Content words cannot be easily figured out if they are deleted.Content words can be inflected.Content words more readily enter into compounds.Content words are an open set; new ones enter our language daily.

(Fromkin Rodman Hyams 74-76)

Page 6: 321 CHAPTER 3 MORPHOLOGY: THE WORDS OF LANGUAGE (71-114) PowerPoint by Don L. F. Nilsen to accompany An Introduction to Language (8e, 2007) by Victoria

32 6

Pronouns meet some of these criteria but not others. They carry some real-world meaning, but not as much as the words they replace.

They can sometimes be stressed.They can be figured out if deleted.They can be inflected.They don’t enter into compounding.They are a closed set.

(Fromkin Rodman Hyams 74-76)

Page 7: 321 CHAPTER 3 MORPHOLOGY: THE WORDS OF LANGUAGE (71-114) PowerPoint by Don L. F. Nilsen to accompany An Introduction to Language (8e, 2007) by Victoria

32 7

CATEGORIES VS. FUNCTIONS

“Noun” is a category. “Subject” is a function.

A Noun or a Pronoun can function as a Subject, a Subject Complement, a Direct Object, an Indirect Object, an Object Complement or an Object of a Preposition.

Pronouns functioning as S or SC are in subject form; those functioning as DO, IO, OC, or OP are in object form.

Page 8: 321 CHAPTER 3 MORPHOLOGY: THE WORDS OF LANGUAGE (71-114) PowerPoint by Don L. F. Nilsen to accompany An Introduction to Language (8e, 2007) by Victoria

32 8

A Verb functions as a Predicate.

An Adjective or an Adverb functions as a Modifier.

An Adjective answers “which,” “what kind of,” or “how many” and modifies a Noun.

An Adverb answers “how,” “when,” “where” or “how much” and modifies a Verb, an Adjective, an Adverb or a Sentence.

Page 9: 321 CHAPTER 3 MORPHOLOGY: THE WORDS OF LANGUAGE (71-114) PowerPoint by Don L. F. Nilsen to accompany An Introduction to Language (8e, 2007) by Victoria

32 9

Function Words have only grammatical meaning.

Prepositions relate Nouns to other Nouns (fourth of July).

Conjunctions relate Sentences to other Sentences.

Articles mark Nouns.

Auxiliaries mark Verbs.

Expletives mark the place of the Subject so that the Subject can be postponed.

Page 10: 321 CHAPTER 3 MORPHOLOGY: THE WORDS OF LANGUAGE (71-114) PowerPoint by Don L. F. Nilsen to accompany An Introduction to Language (8e, 2007) by Victoria

32 10

OLD AND NEW INFORMATION

The Subject of a sentence gives Old Information. It provides the “subject” for the people to talk about.

The Predicate of a sentence gives New Information. It provides new and insightful information about the Subject.

Page 11: 321 CHAPTER 3 MORPHOLOGY: THE WORDS OF LANGUAGE (71-114) PowerPoint by Don L. F. Nilsen to accompany An Introduction to Language (8e, 2007) by Victoria

32 11

Subject and Predicate are important not only to Linguists, but also to Rhetoricians, Psychologists, Logicians, etc., but different names are used in different fields:

Subject vs. Predicate

Topic vs. Comment

Old Information vs. New Information

Theme vs. Rheme

Presupposition vs. Assertion

Page 12: 321 CHAPTER 3 MORPHOLOGY: THE WORDS OF LANGUAGE (71-114) PowerPoint by Don L. F. Nilsen to accompany An Introduction to Language (8e, 2007) by Victoria

32 12

Contrast the following

Bound vs. Free Morphemes

Stem vs. Affix

Prefix vs. Suffix vs. Infix

Derivational vs. Inflectional

Content vs. Functional Morphemes

(Fromkin Rodman Hyams 76-84)

Page 13: 321 CHAPTER 3 MORPHOLOGY: THE WORDS OF LANGUAGE (71-114) PowerPoint by Don L. F. Nilsen to accompany An Introduction to Language (8e, 2007) by Victoria

32 13

Analyze the following word

antidisestablishmentarianism

STEM: stable or establish

Suffixes: -ment, -arian, -ism

Prefixes: dis-, anti-

Page 14: 321 CHAPTER 3 MORPHOLOGY: THE WORDS OF LANGUAGE (71-114) PowerPoint by Don L. F. Nilsen to accompany An Introduction to Language (8e, 2007) by Victoria

32 14

NOUNS

PLURAL: cats, dogs, horses, deer, data, mice, alumni

POSSESSIVE: dog’s, its

PLURAL POSSESSIVE: dogs’(Fromkin Rodman Hyams 98-101)

NOTE: English used to have four cases: Nominative, Genitive, Dative, and Accusative

Page 15: 321 CHAPTER 3 MORPHOLOGY: THE WORDS OF LANGUAGE (71-114) PowerPoint by Don L. F. Nilsen to accompany An Introduction to Language (8e, 2007) by Victoria

32 15

VERBS

THIRD PERSON SINGULAR PRESENT INDICATIVE: goes

PAST TENSE: buzzed, walked, heated, sang

PAST PARTICIPLE: driven, hit, liked

PRESENT PARTICIPLE: driving(Fromkin Rodman Hyams 98-101)

NOTE: English used to have two more forms: driveth, drivest

Page 16: 321 CHAPTER 3 MORPHOLOGY: THE WORDS OF LANGUAGE (71-114) PowerPoint by Don L. F. Nilsen to accompany An Introduction to Language (8e, 2007) by Victoria

32 16

SUPPLETIVE VERBS

A suppletive form is one which comes from two different paradigms. These must be high-frequency words, or they will become regularized through common use.

“Go-went” is a suppletive verb, as is “is-be.” “Go” comes from the “go” paradigm, while “went” comes from the “wend” paradigm.

(Fromkin Rodman Hyams 101)

Page 17: 321 CHAPTER 3 MORPHOLOGY: THE WORDS OF LANGUAGE (71-114) PowerPoint by Don L. F. Nilsen to accompany An Introduction to Language (8e, 2007) by Victoria

32 17

ADJECTIVES

COMPARATIVE: higher, more beautiful, more friendly

SUPERLATIVE: highest, most beautiful, most friendly

(Fromkin Rodman Hyams 98-101)

NOTE: Old English Adjectives used to have four cases (Nom, Gen, Dat, Acc), agreed with nouns, and came after nouns

Page 18: 321 CHAPTER 3 MORPHOLOGY: THE WORDS OF LANGUAGE (71-114) PowerPoint by Don L. F. Nilsen to accompany An Introduction to Language (8e, 2007) by Victoria

32 18

ADVERBS

COMPARATIVE: faster, more imaginatively

SUPERLATIVE: fastest, most imaginatively

(Fromkin Rodman Hyams 98-101)

Adverbs usually end in –ly, however there are

FLAT ADVERBS: fast, firstAND –LY ADJECTIVES: friendly

Page 19: 321 CHAPTER 3 MORPHOLOGY: THE WORDS OF LANGUAGE (71-114) PowerPoint by Don L. F. Nilsen to accompany An Introduction to Language (8e, 2007) by Victoria

32 19

PERSONAL PRONOUNS

Sing Nom Obj Pos Substantive Reflexive

1st I me my mine myself2nd you you your yours yourself3rd he him his his himself she her her hers herself it it its its itself

Plural1st we us our ours ourselves2nd you you your yours yourselves3rd they them their theirs themselves

Page 20: 321 CHAPTER 3 MORPHOLOGY: THE WORDS OF LANGUAGE (71-114) PowerPoint by Don L. F. Nilsen to accompany An Introduction to Language (8e, 2007) by Victoria

32 20

RELATIVE AND INTERROGATIVE PRONOUNS

RELATIVE: INTERROGATIVEwhen whenwhere wherewhy whyhow howwhich whichwhat whatthat

Page 21: 321 CHAPTER 3 MORPHOLOGY: THE WORDS OF LANGUAGE (71-114) PowerPoint by Don L. F. Nilsen to accompany An Introduction to Language (8e, 2007) by Victoria

32 21

DEMONSTRATIVE PRONOUNS

singular: plural:

close: this that

far: these those

Page 22: 321 CHAPTER 3 MORPHOLOGY: THE WORDS OF LANGUAGE (71-114) PowerPoint by Don L. F. Nilsen to accompany An Introduction to Language (8e, 2007) by Victoria

32 22

Contrast these sentences

When did she arrive? (Int Pro)

I know when she arrived. (Rel Pro)

This is the pen that you borrowed. (Rel Pro)

Please give me that pen. (Dem Pro)

I know that you wanted to do well. (SC)

Page 23: 321 CHAPTER 3 MORPHOLOGY: THE WORDS OF LANGUAGE (71-114) PowerPoint by Don L. F. Nilsen to accompany An Introduction to Language (8e, 2007) by Victoria

32 23

INDEFINITE PRONOUNS (GO WITH A SINGULAR VERB)

THING: PLACE: TIME:

ANY anything anywhere anytime

NO nothing nowhere never

SOME- something somewhere sometime

Page 24: 321 CHAPTER 3 MORPHOLOGY: THE WORDS OF LANGUAGE (71-114) PowerPoint by Don L. F. Nilsen to accompany An Introduction to Language (8e, 2007) by Victoria

32 24

ARCHAIC FORMS:SHAKESPEARE & THE BIBLE

NOMINATIVE: POSSESSIVE:ACCUSATIVE:

SINGULARS: thou (Nom), thy, thine (Gen), thee (Acc)

PLURALS: you, ye

DUALS: wit, uncer, unc, git, incer, inc (NOTE: No longer in Modern English

Page 25: 321 CHAPTER 3 MORPHOLOGY: THE WORDS OF LANGUAGE (71-114) PowerPoint by Don L. F. Nilsen to accompany An Introduction to Language (8e, 2007) by Victoria

32 25

MORPHOLOGICAL HUMOR

Page 26: 321 CHAPTER 3 MORPHOLOGY: THE WORDS OF LANGUAGE (71-114) PowerPoint by Don L. F. Nilsen to accompany An Introduction to Language (8e, 2007) by Victoria

32 26

UGLIFICATION

“I never heard of ‘Uglification,’ Alice ventured to say. ‘What is it?’ The Gryphon lifted up both its paws in surprise. “never heard of uglifying!” it exclaimed. “You know what to beautify is, I suppose?’ ‘Yes,’ said Alice doubtfully: ‘it means—to make—anything-prettier.’ ‘Well, then,’ the Gryphon went on, ‘if you don’t know what to uglify is, you are a simpleton.’”

(Fromkin Rodman Hyams 83)(Carroll 128-129)

Page 27: 321 CHAPTER 3 MORPHOLOGY: THE WORDS OF LANGUAGE (71-114) PowerPoint by Don L. F. Nilsen to accompany An Introduction to Language (8e, 2007) by Victoria

32 27

The term “uglification” is part of a longer quote in which Alice is being told about the education system in Wonderland. Students in Wonderland study “Reeling, Writhing, Uglification and Derision.”

They call their teacher “Tortoise” because he “taught us.”

Lessons get shorter each day. That’s why they’re called “lessens.”

In Wonderland, “Latin and Greek” becomes “Laughing and Grief,” and “drawing, sketching and painting in oils” becomes “Drawling, Stretching, and Fainting in Coils.”

(Carroll 128-129)

Page 28: 321 CHAPTER 3 MORPHOLOGY: THE WORDS OF LANGUAGE (71-114) PowerPoint by Don L. F. Nilsen to accompany An Introduction to Language (8e, 2007) by Victoria

32 28

CLICK AND CLACKTHE TAPPET BROTHERS

On National Public Radio’s “Cartalk,” Click and Clack are playing with Morphology in their list of credits:Copyeditor: Adeline MooreAccounts Payable: Ineeda CzechPollution Control: Maury MissionsPurchasing: Lois BidderStatistician: Marge Innovera Russian Chauffeur: Picov AndropovLegal Firm: Dewey, Cheetham, and Howe.

(Fromkin Rodman Hyams 72)

Page 29: 321 CHAPTER 3 MORPHOLOGY: THE WORDS OF LANGUAGE (71-114) PowerPoint by Don L. F. Nilsen to accompany An Introduction to Language (8e, 2007) by Victoria

32 29

!BILINGUAL MORPHOLOGICAL WORD PLAY

“Un petit d’un petitS’étonne aux Halles”

This makes no sense in French, but it makes perfect sense in English:

“Humpty DumptySat on a wall”

(Fromkin Rodman Hyams 72)

Page 30: 321 CHAPTER 3 MORPHOLOGY: THE WORDS OF LANGUAGE (71-114) PowerPoint by Don L. F. Nilsen to accompany An Introduction to Language (8e, 2007) by Victoria

32 30

!!WATERGATE

The Watergate Hotel is where the break-in of the National Democratic headquarters occurred.

Today’s dictionaries give more room to the metonymous meaning of Watergate than to the literal meaning of “a gate controlling the flow of water.”

“Gate” has now become a suffix meaning “scandal” as in Irangate, Contragate, Iraqgate, Pearlygate, Rubbergate, Murphygate, Gennifergate, Nannygate, Monicagate, ad infinitum.

(Nilsen & Nilsen 180)

Page 31: 321 CHAPTER 3 MORPHOLOGY: THE WORDS OF LANGUAGE (71-114) PowerPoint by Don L. F. Nilsen to accompany An Introduction to Language (8e, 2007) by Victoria

32 31

!!!NEW DEFINITIONS

ArteryArtery: The study of painting: The study of painting

BacteriaBacteria: The back door of a : The back door of a cafeteriacafeteria

BariumBarium: What doctors do when : What doctors do when patients die.patients die.

Nilsen & Nilsen 177)Nilsen & Nilsen 177)

Page 32: 321 CHAPTER 3 MORPHOLOGY: THE WORDS OF LANGUAGE (71-114) PowerPoint by Don L. F. Nilsen to accompany An Introduction to Language (8e, 2007) by Victoria

32 32

References:

Carroll, Lewis. Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland. New York, NY: Random House, 1960.

Clark, Virginia, Paul Eschholz, and Alfred Rosa. Language: Readings in Language and Culture, 6th Edition. New York, NY: St. Martin’s Press, 1998.

Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman, and Nina Hyams. “Morphology: The Words of Language.” An Introduction to Language, 8th Edition. Boston, MA: Thomson Wadsworth, 2007, 71-114.

Gleason, H. A. Jr. “The Identification of Morphemes” (Clark, 144-153).

Nilsen, Alleen Pace, and Don L. F. Nilsen. Encyclopedia of 20th Century American Humor. Westport, CT: Greenwood, 2000.