Morphology: Crash Course Linguistics #2 | Summary and Q&A
TL;DR
A linguist explores the definition of a word, understanding it as both a big meaning (unpredictable combinations) and a small meaning (breakdown of parts).
Key Insights
- 😃 Words have both a big meaning (unpredictable combinations of form and meaning) and a small meaning (breakdown of parts).
- 💁 Lexemes are the largest unpredictable combinations of form and meaning found in dictionaries.
- 🖐️ Morphemes are the smallest unpredictable combinations of form and meaning, playing a significant role in understanding language patterns.
- 🥶 Compounds, free morphemes, and bound morphemes are different ways in which words are formed.
- 🏛️ Linguists analyze morphology to understand how words are built and how meaning is conveyed.
- 💨 Languages can differ in the way they form words, such as through infixes, circumfixes, or vowel changes.
- 🔑 Suppletion is the process of completely replacing a word instead of adding morphemes.
Transcript
Hi, I'm Taylor and welcome to Crash Course Linguistics! According to the word count feature in a document, a word is a thing with spaces around it. That’s a useful definition if we're just trying to figure out how long an essay should be, but it's not a very good guide to defining what “counts” as a word. For example, "doghouse" is generally writte... Read More
Questions & Answers
Q: How do linguists define a word?
Linguists define a word as having both a big meaning (unpredictable combinations of form and meaning) and a small meaning (breakdown of parts).
Q: Why are lexemes important in understanding words?
Lexemes are the largest unpredictable combinations of form and meaning in a dictionary and provide insight into how words are defined.
Q: What are morphemes, and why are they significant?
Morphemes are the smallest unpredictable combinations of form and meaning, and they help linguists analyze patterns and similarities across languages.
Q: What is the difference between free morphemes, compounds, and bound morphemes?
Free morphemes can stand alone as words (e.g., "rabbit"), compounds are combinations of free morphemes (e.g., "doghouse"), and bound morphemes cannot stand alone (e.g., the suffix "-s" in "rabbits").
Summary & Key Takeaways
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A word has a big meaning when it contains unpredictable combinations of form and meaning, like "rabbit hole."
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Words like "deep hole" can be figured out from the definitions of its individual parts and are predictable.
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Linguists study morphemes, which are the smallest unpredictable combinations of form and meaning, and analyze how they fit together to form words.