📋 Contents of This Page

  1. Unit Introduction & Why It Matters
  2. What Is a Morpheme? How Is It Different from a Phoneme?
  3. Allomorph – Variants of the Same Morpheme
  4. Free vs. Bound Morphemes
  5. Inflectional vs. Derivational Morphemes
  6. Affixation – Prefixes, Suffixes, Infixes
  7. Other Word Formation Processes
  8. General Principles of Lexicography
  9. Morphophonemic Changes
  10. Problems of Morphological Analysis
  11. Exam Orientation & Important Questions
  12. Common Student Mistakes
  13. Quick Revision
  14. Practice MCQs (20 Questions)

What Is This Unit About?

If Phonology is about sounds, Morphology is about words — specifically, about the internal structure of words. It asks: How are words built? What are their smallest meaningful parts?

🧱 The Big Idea

Think of a word like a building. The bricks that make it up are called morphemes. The word "unhappiness" is built from THREE bricks: un- + happy + -ness. Each brick adds a layer of meaning. Morphology is the science of understanding these bricks and how they combine.

Real-World Relevance Every time you look up a word in a dictionary, understand a new medical term, decode a complex legal word, or figure out what an unknown word means from its parts — you are using morphological knowledge. This unit teaches you the system behind it.

✅ What You Will Learn

  • What morphemes are and how to find them
  • How morphemes differ from phonemes
  • Free vs Bound morphemes
  • Inflectional vs Derivational morphemes
  • All major word formation processes
  • Morphophonemic changes
  • Lexicography basics
  • Problems of morphological analysis

🎯 Exam Relevance

  • Q3 in QP (15 marks) — fully from this unit
  • Q5(i): Two examples of zero morpheme
  • Affixation, bound/free, morphophonemics — all asked
  • Most conceptual unit — needs clear definitions + examples
  • Indian-English word formation examples score well

What Is a Morpheme? How Is It Different from a Phoneme?

Definition — Morpheme
A morpheme is the smallest unit of language that carries meaning or serves a grammatical function. It cannot be divided into smaller meaningful parts.
🔬 Understanding Morphemes With Examples

The key test for a morpheme is: Does dividing it further still give meaningful units? If yes, both parts are morphemes. If no, you've reached the smallest meaningful unit.

Prefix
un-
meaning: NOT
Root
break
meaning: TO BREAK
Suffix
-able
meaning: CAN BE

"unbreakable" = 3 morphemes

WordMorphemesCountAnalysis
catcat1Single free morpheme — cannot be divided
catscat + -s2Root + plural morpheme
teacherteach + -er2Verb root + agent suffix
unhappyun- + happy2Negative prefix + adjective root
unhappinessun- + happy + -ness3Prefix + root + noun-forming suffix
teachersteach + -er + -s3Root + agent + plural
booksbook + -s2Root + plural morpheme
walkedwalk + -ed2Root + past tense morpheme
internationallyinter- + nation + -al + -ly4Prefix + root + adj. suffix + adv. suffix
🌟 Indian Language Examples Marathi: "शाळा" (shala = school) — 1 morpheme. "शाळेत" (shaalet = in school) — 2 morphemes: शाळा + -त (locative suffix). Same morpheme principle works across all languages — this is a UNIVERSAL feature of human language.
⚖️ Morpheme vs. Phoneme — The Key Difference
AspectPhonemeMorpheme
BranchPhonologyMorphology
DefinitionSmallest unit of SOUND that changes meaningSmallest unit of MEANING (or grammatical function)
Carries meaning?No — /p/ by itself means nothingYes — "un-" means NOT, "-s" means plural
Can stand alone?No — phonemes combine to form morphemesSome can (free morphemes), some cannot (bound)
Level of analysisSound levelWord/meaning level
Example/k/, /æ/, /t/ — three phonemes in "cat""cat" — one morpheme
Number in English~44 phonemesTens of thousands of morphemes
Notation/ / for phonemes, [ ] for phones{ } for morphemes or written as words
📝 Q3a Exam Answer — "What is a morpheme? How is it different from a phoneme?" Define morpheme → Give examples (cat, unhappy, teachers) → Define phoneme → Comparison table (4–5 key differences) → Conclude: phonemes build morphemes; morphemes build words.
🔢 Types of Morphemes — The Big Picture
Classification of Morphemes
MORPHEMES FREE MORPHEMES BOUND MORPHEMES Lexical / Content cat, run, happy Functional / Grammar the, and, of, in Inflectional -s, -ed, -ing, -er Derivational -ness, -tion, un- ZERO MORPHEME (∅) sheep→sheep, deer→deer, cut→cut

Allomorph – Variants of the Same Morpheme

Definition
An allomorph is one of two or more variant forms of the same morpheme. Just as allophones are variants of a phoneme, allomorphs are variants of a morpheme — they carry the same meaning/function but appear in different phonetic contexts.
📌 The Best Example — The English Plural Morpheme {-s}

The plural morpheme has ONE meaning (more than one) but THREE different pronunciations depending on the sound before it. These three pronunciations are allomorphs:

Plural Morpheme {-s}
After voiceless/s/cats, books, cups
|
After voiced/z/dogs, beds, cars
|
After sibilants/ɪz/buses, roses, judges
AllomorphPhonetic ContextExamples
/s/After voiceless consonants (/p/, /t/, /k/, /f/, /θ/)cats /kæts/, books /bʊks/, cups /kʌps/, months /mʌnθs/
/z/After voiced consonants and vowelsdogs /dɒgz/, beds /bedz/, cars /kɑːz/, boys /bɔɪz/
/ɪz/After sibilants (/s/, /z/, /ʃ/, /ʒ/, /tʃ/, /dʒ/)buses /bʌsɪz/, roses /rəʊzɪz/, churches /tʃɜːtʃɪz/
The Past Tense Morpheme {-ed} Also Has Three Allomorphs /t/ after voiceless consonants: walked /wɔːkt/, jumped /dʒʌmpt/, kissed /kɪst/
/d/ after voiced consonants and vowels: jogged /dʒɒgd/, loved /lʌvd/, played /pleɪd/
/ɪd/ after /t/ or /d/: wanted /wɒntɪd/, needed /niːdɪd/, painted /peɪntɪd/
More Allomorphs to Know Indefinite article {a/an}: "a" before consonants (a cat), "an" before vowels (an apple) — same morpheme, two allomorphs.
Negative prefix {in-}: in-credible, im-possible (/m/ before bilabials), il-legal (/l/ before /l/), ir-regular (/r/ before /r/) — all allomorphs of the same prefix.
📝 Key Distinction for Exams Allophone is to Phoneme what Allomorph is to Morpheme. Both involve variants of a larger abstract unit that appear in different contexts.

Free vs. Bound Morphemes

🔓 Free Morphemes

  • Can stand ALONE as a word
  • Do not need other morphemes to be meaningful
  • Two types: Lexical (content) & Functional (grammar)
  • Examples: cat, run, happy, book, the, and, of, in
  • Lexical free morphemes carry main meaning
  • Functional free morphemes show grammatical relationships

🔗 Bound Morphemes

  • CANNOT stand alone — always attached to another morpheme
  • Also called affixes (prefixes, suffixes, infixes)
  • Two types: Inflectional & Derivational
  • Examples: -s, -ed, -ing, -er, un-, re-, -ness, -tion
  • Always attached to a root/base
  • Cranberry morphemes: unique bound morphemes in no other context (e.g., "cran-" in cranberry)
🫐 Special Case: Cranberry Morphemes

A cranberry morpheme (also called a unique morpheme) is a bound morpheme that appears in only one word and has no clear independent meaning. It is bound but cannot be analysed as a normal prefix/suffix.

WordCranberry MorphemeIdentifiable Part
cranberrycran--berry is known; cran- has no independent meaning
twilighttwi--light is known; twi- means nothing alone
lukewarmluke--warm is known; luke- is unique to this word
dissembledis- ?Cannot be cleanly separated from root
0️⃣ Zero Morpheme — A Special Bound Morpheme
Definition
A zero morpheme (∅) is a morpheme that has no phonological form — it is invisible/silent — but still performs a grammatical function. The word looks the same in two different forms, but the grammatical change is still considered morphological.
Base FormGrammatical FormZero Morpheme FunctionOther Examples
sheepsheep (plural)∅ = pluraldeer, fish, series, species
cutcut (past tense)∅ = past tenseput, let, hit, burst, hurt
mustmust (no 3rd person -s)∅ = 3rd person singularmodal verbs: can, will, shall
📝 Q5(i) — Exam Answer: Give two examples of zero morpheme 1. sheep → sheep (plural form identical to singular — zero plural morpheme ∅)
2. cut → cut (past tense identical to present — zero past tense morpheme ∅)
Other acceptable answers: deer → deer, put → put, let → let, fish → fish

Inflectional vs. Derivational Morphemes

Both are types of bound morphemes. The key difference: inflectional morphemes change the grammatical form of a word; derivational morphemes change the meaning or word class.

📊 Side-by-Side Comparison
AspectInflectional MorphemesDerivational Morphemes
FunctionShow grammatical relationships (tense, number, person, case)Create new words with new meanings or word classes
Change word class?No — "cat" and "cats" are both nounsYes (often) — "teach" (verb) → "teacher" (noun)
Change meaning?Only grammatically — not lexical meaningYes — significant meaning change
Number in EnglishOnly 8 inflectional morphemesHundreds of derivational morphemes
PositionAlways at the END (suffixes only)Can be prefixes OR suffixes
ProductivityVery productive — applies to most wordsVariable — not all roots take all derivational affixes
Examples-s, -es, -ed, -ing, -er, -est, -'s, -en-ness, -tion, -er (agent), un-, re-, -al, -ly, -ful

The 8 Inflectional Morphemes of English

MorphemeFunctionExamples
-s / -esPlural nouncat→cats, box→boxes
'sPossessive nounJohn's, the dog's
-s3rd person singular present tensehe runs, she eats
-edPast tensewalked, jumped
-en / -edPast participlebroken, walked
-ingPresent participle / gerundwalking, running
-erComparative adjectivetaller, bigger
-estSuperlative adjectivetallest, biggest

Common Derivational Morphemes

MorphemeTypeFunctionExamples
-nessSuffixAdj → Nounhappy→happiness, dark→darkness
-tion/-sionSuffixVerb → Nouncreate→creation, decide→decision
-er/-orSuffixVerb → Agent Nounteach→teacher, act→actor
-fulSuffixNoun → Adjhope→hopeful, care→careful
-lessSuffixNoun → Adjhope→hopeless, care→careless
-lySuffixAdj → Adverbquick→quickly, slow→slowly
-ise/-izeSuffixNoun/Adj → Verbmodern→modernise, real→realise
-al/-ialSuffixNoun → Adjnation→national, accident→accidental
un-PrefixNegation / Reversalunhappy, undo, unlock
re-PrefixAgain / Backrewrite, return, remake
pre-PrefixBeforepreview, prehistoric, pre-school
dis-PrefixOppositedisagree, dishonest, disappear
mis-PrefixWronglymislead, misunderstand, misspell
over-PrefixToo muchoverwork, overestimate, overflow

Affixation – Prefixes, Suffixes & Infixes

Definition
Affixation is the most productive word formation process in English — it involves adding a bound morpheme (affix) to a root or base to create a new word or grammatical form.
📋 Three Types of Affixation

🔴 PREFIX

Added before the root.

unhappy
rewrite
preview
disagree
mislead
overwork
submarine
antisocial

🟢 SUFFIX

Added after the root.

teacher
happiness
creation
quickly
hopeful
careless
modernise
national

🟡 INFIX

Inserted inside the root.

Rare in English. More common in Filipino (Tagalog), Sanskrit.

Filipino: sumulat (sulat + -um-)
Engish (expressive): abso-bloody-lutely

Important: Affixation and Wordclass Change Suffixes often CHANGE the word class (part of speech). This is called transpositional or category-changing derivation:
teach (Verb) + -er → teacher (Noun)
happy (Adj) + -ness → happiness (Noun)
nation (Noun) + -al → national (Adjective)
quick (Adj) + -ly → quickly (Adverb)

Common Prefixes and Their Meanings

PrefixMeaningExamples
un-not, reversalunhappy, undo, unpack, unlock
re-again, backrewrite, return, rebuild, reopen
pre-beforepreview, prehistoric, premature
post-afterpostwar, postgraduate, postpone
dis-not, oppositedisagree, disappear, dishonest
mis-wronglymislead, mispronounce, misguide
over-too much, aboveoverwork, overlook, overcome
under-too little, belowunderestimate, undermine, underpay
inter-between, amonginternational, interchange, interact
anti-againstantiwar, antibacterial, antisocial
bi-twobilingual, bicycle, biannual
mono-onemonolingual, monologue, monotone

Other Word Formation Processes

Besides affixation, English builds new words through many other fascinating processes. All of these are examinable.

🔗 Compounding
Two or more free morphemes (independent words) are joined to form a new word with a new, unified meaning.
blackboardsunflowertoothpastebookshelffootballgreenhousekeyboard
🔁 Reduplication
A word or part of a word is repeated, sometimes with slight variation, to form a new word.
bye-byetick-tockwishy-washyzigzagding-dongchit-chat
✂️ Clipping
A longer word is shortened by removing one or more syllables. The clipped form retains the original meaning.
examination→examlaboratory→labtelephone→phonerefrigerator→fridgeinfluenza→fluadvertisement→ad
🔀 Blending
Parts of two words are fused together (usually the beginning of one + end of another) to create a new word. Also called "portmanteau words."
smoke+fog→smogbreakfast+lunch→brunchmotor+hotel→motelweb+log→blogcamera+recorder→camcorder
🔤 Acronym
A word formed from the initial letters of a phrase. The letters are pronounced as a new word (not spelled out).
NATONASASCUBARADARLASERAIDSBRICS
⬅️ Back-formation
A new word is created by removing what looks like a suffix (even if it was never one). The "new" word appears to be the base of the original.
editor→edittelevision→televiseburglar→burgleenthusiasm→enthusedonation→donate
🔄 Conversion
A word changes its word class (part of speech) WITHOUT any morphological change. Also called Zero Derivation.
water (N)→to water (V)to email (V)→an email (N)to park (V)→a park (N)Google (N)→to google (V)
📛 Eponymy
A new word is created from the name of a person or place associated with it.
sandwich (Earl of Sandwich)jacuzzi (Candido Jacuzzi)boycott (Captain Boycott)hoover (William Hoover)
🌍 Borrowing
Words taken from other languages and incorporated into English vocabulary. English has borrowed from hundreds of languages.
jungle (Hindi)shampoo (Hindi)bungalow (Bengali)café (French)algebra (Arabic)
🌟 Acronym vs. Abbreviation — Don't Confuse! Acronym: Pronounced as a word — NATO /ˈneɪtəʊ/, SCUBA /ˈskuːbə/, LASER /ˈleɪzə/
Initialism / Abbreviation: Each letter is pronounced — BBC /biː biː siː/, USA /juː es eɪ/, PhD
Most linguists consider both as types of abbreviation-based word formation, but acronym specifically = pronounced as a word.
🌟 Indian-English Word Formation Examples Blending: Hinglish (Hindi+English), Bollywood (Bombay+Hollywood)
Compounding: lunchbox, autorickshaw, photostat
Acronyms: ISRO, UPSC, BCCI
Borrowing into English from Indian languages: yoga, avatar, karma, guru, pundit, pyjama, thug, bungalow, jungle, shampoo, loot, cheetah

General Principles of Lexicography

Definition
Lexicography is the theory and practice of compiling dictionaries. It is the applied branch of lexicology (the study of words and vocabulary).
📖 Key Principles of Lexicography

1. Selection of Entries

Lexicographers decide which words to include based on frequency, importance, and usage evidence (from corpora — large collections of real language data).

2. Defining Words

Definitions must be accurate (capture the exact meaning), clear (understood by the target user), economical (not too lengthy), and discriminating (distinguish from similar words).

3. Descriptive vs. Prescriptive Approach

Modern dictionaries are descriptive — they record language as it is actually used, not how it "should" be used. They include slang, neologisms, and informal usage.

4. Treatment of Polysemy & Homonymy

Polysemy: One word with multiple related meanings (e.g., "bank" = riverbank AND financial bank — both listed under one entry because they're etymologically related).
Homonymy: Two different words that happen to have the same spelling/pronunciation (e.g., "bat" = cricket bat vs flying bat — listed as separate entries).

5. Corpus-Based Lexicography

Modern dictionaries (Oxford, Cambridge, Longman) use corpora — billions of words of real text — to find actual usage patterns, frequency, and collocations. This makes definitions accurate and up-to-date.

6. Ordering and Arrangement

Words are typically arranged alphabetically. Each entry includes: headword, pronunciation, word class, definition(s), example sentences, etymology, and sometimes synonyms/antonyms.

Morphophonemic Changes

Definition
Morphophonemic changes (also called morphophonological changes or alternations) are changes in the phonological form of a morpheme depending on the phonological environment — i.e., what sounds surround it.
🔊 Why Morphophonemic Changes Happen

When morphemes are added to roots, the combination sometimes causes phonological changes for easier pronunciation. This is the intersection of Morphology and Phonology. We have already seen one major example — allomorphs of the plural morpheme (/s/, /z/, /ɪz/). Here are more systematic changes:

Rule 1
Assimilation — The "in-" prefix allomorphs

The negative prefix {in-} assimilates to the following consonant: in- + possible → impossible (/n/ → /m/ before bilabials); in- + legal → illegal (/n/ → /l/ before /l/); in- + regular → irregular (/n/ → /r/ before /r/)

Rule 2
Vowel Change (Ablaut) — Irregular past tense

Some verbs form the past tense by changing the root vowel rather than adding -ed: sing → sang, run → ran, write → wrote, break → broke, drive → drove, take → took, grow → grew

Rule 3
Consonant Alternation (Voicing Change)

Some nouns change a voiceless consonant to voiced when forming plural or verb: leaf → leaves (f→v), life → lives, knife → knives, wife → wives, house (n) /haʊs/ → house (v) /haʊz/

Rule 4
Stress Shift + Vowel Reduction

When derivational suffixes are added, stress may shift, causing vowel reduction in unstressed syllables: 'photograph → pho'tography (stress shifts, vowels reduce); 'democrat → de'mocracy; 'telephone → te'lephony

Rule 5
Phonological Conditioning vs. Morphological Conditioning

Phonological conditioning: The allomorph is determined by surrounding SOUNDS (e.g., /s/ vs /z/ for plural — determined by whether preceding consonant is voiced or voiceless).
Morphological conditioning: The allomorph is determined by the morpheme class or specific word (e.g., ox→oxen, child→children — not predictable from sound alone)

📝 Q3b Exam Answer — "What is meant by morphophonemic changes?" Define (changes in form of a morpheme due to phonological context) → Give 3 examples: (1) plural allomorphs /s/, /z/, /ɪz/ — phonologically conditioned; (2) {in-} prefix allomorphs (im-, il-, ir-) — assimilation; (3) leaf→leaves — consonant voicing change → Explain phonological vs morphological conditioning.

Problems of Morphological Analysis

🧩 Why Morphological Analysis Is Difficult

Identifying and counting morphemes seems straightforward, but real language throws up many tricky cases. Here are the main problems:

1

The Problem of Portmanteau Morphemes

A single form fuses two morphemes inseparably. Example: French "du" = "de" + "le" (of + the). In English: "worse" expresses BOTH comparative AND the root meaning of "bad" — it cannot be neatly separated into root + comparative morpheme.

2

The Problem of Suppletion

Some morphological relationships use completely different roots instead of affixes. Example: go → went (NOT go+ed); be → was/were/am/is/are; good → better → best. These are called suppletive forms — same morpheme, completely different phonological shape.

3

The Problem of Cranberry Morphemes

Some bound morphemes appear in only one word and have no analysable meaning: "cran-" in cranberry, "twi-" in twilight. They are bound but resist normal morphological analysis.

4

The Problem of Zero Morphemes

How do we prove that a morpheme exists if it has no phonological form? sheep → sheep (plural) — the plural is marked by ∅, but we only know this by comparing with other plurals. Zero morphemes are theoretically inferred, not observed.

5

The Problem of Allomorphic Irregularity

Some morphemes have highly irregular allomorphs not predictable by any phonological rule: child → children (not childs); ox → oxen; mouse → mice; man → men. These are morphologically conditioned and must be memorised, not derived.

6

The Boundary Between Derivation and Compounding

Some words look like compounds but behave like derivations: "greenhouse" vs "green house." Also, when does an affix become a separate word? (e.g., "-able" is now used independently in informal speech: "is this plan do-able?")

University QP Analysis — Unit 3 Questions

🔥 Q3 (Any 2 of 4) — 15 Marks
Q3a: What is a morpheme? How is it different from a phoneme?
→ Define morpheme (smallest meaningful unit) → Examples: cat/cats/teacher/unhappy → Define phoneme (smallest meaning-CHANGING SOUND unit) → Key difference table (5 points) → Conclude: phonemes make up morphemes, morphemes make up words
Q3b: What is meant by morphophonemic changes?
→ Define (changes in form of a morpheme due to phonological context) → Example 1: plural allomorphs /s/,/z/,/ɪz/ → Example 2: {in-} prefix → im-/il-/ir- (assimilation) → Example 3: leaf→leaves (voicing) → Phonological vs morphological conditioning
Q3c: Bring out the difference between Bound morpheme and Free morpheme.
→ Define both clearly → Table comparison (5–6 points) → Free: content (cat, run) and functional (the, and) types → Bound: inflectional (-s, -ed) and derivational (un-, -ness) types → Cranberry morpheme as a special case → Examples from Indian languages
Q3d: Write a note on 'Affixation'.
→ Define affixation → Three types: prefix, suffix, infix → Most productive process in English → Prefix examples (10+) → Suffix examples (10+) → Infix note (rare in English) → Affixation and word class change → Derivational vs inflectional affixation
📝 Q5 Short Answers — Morphology Related
Q5(i): Give two examples of zero morpheme → 1. sheep → sheep (plural)   2. cut → cut (past tense)
Other valid: deer → deer, put → put, let → let, fish → fish (when countable plural)
📌 Predicted Questions (Based on QP Pattern) 1. Explain inflectional and derivational morphemes with examples.
2. What is an allomorph? Explain with the plural morpheme example.
3. Describe any five word formation processes with examples each.
4. What is back-formation? Give examples.
5. What is the difference between clipping and blending? Illustrate.

Mistakes Students Commonly Make

Confusing Morpheme with Syllable

A syllable is a unit of PRONUNCIATION (based on vowels). A morpheme is a unit of MEANING. "Butter" = 2 syllables (but-ter) but 1 morpheme (cannot be split into meaningful parts). "Teachers" = 2 syllables (teach-ers) AND 3 morphemes (teach + -er + -s). They are completely different levels of analysis.

Saying "-er" in "teacher" and "-er" in "taller" are the same morpheme

They look identical but are DIFFERENT morphemes. "-er" in "teacher" = DERIVATIONAL suffix (verb→noun, agent). "-er" in "taller" = INFLECTIONAL suffix (comparative). Always identify the function, not just the form.

Writing "zero morpheme = no change" without explaining WHY

Students say "sheep has zero morpheme" and stop. You must explain: the PLURAL function IS present (it's a grammatical form), but it is realised by a zero morpheme (∅) — an absence of phonological marking. Contrast with regular plurals to make the point clear.

Confusing Back-formation with Clipping

Both shorten words, but differently. Clipping: "examination → exam" — just removes syllables, word class doesn't change (both nouns). Back-formation: "editor → edit" — removes what looks like a suffix AND changes the word class (noun→verb). Back-formation creates a new word of a DIFFERENT class.

Listing "conversion" as affixation

Conversion (zero derivation) involves NO morphological change — no affix is added. "Water" (noun) → "to water" (verb) is conversion, not affixation. Students sometimes assume every word-class change involves an affix — this is wrong. Conversion is precisely the process where word class changes WITHOUT any affix.

Confusing Morphophonemic Change with Simple Spelling Change

When "leaf" becomes "leaves," students often say "f is changed to v for spelling." Wrong — this is a PHONOLOGICAL change (the actual sound changes from /f/ to /v/) triggered by the morphological process of pluralisation. It is a morphophonemic alternation.

One-Page Summary

What Is a Morpheme?

  • Smallest meaningful unit
  • unhappy = un+happy (2 morphemes)
  • teachers = teach+er+s (3)
  • Phoneme = sound unit; Morpheme = meaning unit

Allomorph

  • Variant form of same morpheme
  • Plural: /s/ cats, /z/ dogs, /ɪz/ buses
  • Past: /t/ walked, /d/ jogged, /ɪd/ wanted
  • in-/im-/il-/ir- = allomorphs of {in-}

Free vs Bound

  • Free = stands alone (cat, run, the)
  • Bound = needs other morpheme (-s, un-)
  • Lexical free = content words
  • Functional free = grammar words

Inflectional (only 8)

  • -s (plural), -'s (possessive)
  • -ed (past), -en (past participle)
  • -ing (progressive)
  • -er (comparative), -est (superlative)
  • No word class change

Derivational

  • Creates new words
  • Often changes word class
  • -ness, -tion, -er(agent), -ly, -ful
  • un-, re-, dis-, pre-, mis-
  • Hundreds of these in English

Word Formation

  • Affixation — un+happy
  • Compounding — blackboard
  • Blending — smog, brunch
  • Clipping — exam, lab, fridge
  • Acronym — NASA, LASER
  • Back-formation — editor→edit

Zero Morpheme (Q5i)

  • sheep → sheep (plural ∅)
  • cut → cut (past tense ∅)
  • deer → deer
  • put → put, let → let
  • Morpheme present but phonologically empty

Morphophonemic Changes

  • Form of morpheme changes by phonology
  • Assimilation: in→im/il/ir
  • Voicing: leaf→leaves
  • Ablaut: sing→sang
  • Stress shift: ˈphoto → phoˈtography
🧠 Memory Tricks 8 Inflectional morphemes: "S-ED-EN-ING-S-'S-ER-EST" = plural, past, past participle, progressive, 3rd person -s, possessive, comparative, superlative.
Word formation CABBRE: Compounding, Affixation, Blending, Back-formation, Reduplication, Eponymy — plus Clipping, Acronym, Conversion.
Free/Bound test: "Can it stand alone as a word?" YES = Free. NO = Bound.
🧩

Practice MCQs — Unit 3: Morphology

20 Questions · Choose the best answer · Click Submit for instant score

Question 01
How many morphemes does the word unhappiness contain?
Question 02
Which of the following is the correct definition of a MORPHEME?
Question 03
The plural -s in "cats" is pronounced /s/, while in "dogs" it is /z/. These are examples of ___.
Question 04
Which of the following is a FREE morpheme?
Question 05
The -ed in "walked" and the -er in "taller" are both ___.
Question 06
Which word formation process produced the word smog (from smoke + fog)?
Question 07
The word editor giving rise to the verb edit is an example of ___.
Question 08
Two examples of ZERO MORPHEME are ___.
Question 09
The negative prefix in- becomes im- in "impossible." This is an example of ___.
Question 10
The suffix -ness in "happiness" is a ___ morpheme.
Question 11
Which of the following is an ACRONYM?
Question 12
Using "water" as a NOUN ("a glass of water") and also as a VERB ("to water the plants") without any morphological change is called ___.
Question 13
A key difference between INFLECTIONAL and DERIVATIONAL morphemes is ___.
Question 14
The word cran- in "cranberry" is an example of ___.
Question 15
The irregular past tense "sang" (from "sing") is an example of ___.
Question 16
Which of the following shows CLIPPING?
Question 17
Morphophonemic changes are changes in the ___.
Question 18
Lexicography is best defined as ___.
Question 19
The word breakfast+lunch→brunch is an example of ___.
Question 20
In the word internationally, how many morphemes are there?
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Questions Correct