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morpheme of wisconsin,uniform,trasplant,generative?
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I agree with you AlpheccaStars. I offered 'isomorphs', meaning 'same shape' as applicable to both the 'shape' or orthography of text, and the 'shape' of speech morphemes. Your answer is more applicable to
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it is still a noun, no matter what grammatical case it is in. I can't agree. There are numerous examples where the addition of a morpheme changes the grammatical category of a word. -tion changes a verb to a noun ( evict, eviction ); -ness
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Is this what you mean? Decriminalised: de (bound morpheme ) criminal (free morpheme ) ize (derivational morpheme ) d (inflectional morpheme )
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I'm having a little trouble breaking these words down into their morphemes and identifying whether they are derivational or inflectional, and the class changes - I'm very confused! Decriminalised Detainee Housebreaking Illegality
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I am not sure your German example is a good one. The indirect object can be expressed in English without a preposition: Give the man a medal. Give me it etc. More generally, I do not think it is the case at all that languages that use prepositions
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It's true. A-S words are usually one-syllable, with lots of vowel digraphs making them hard to spell for youngsters. The A-Ss were generally illiterate farmers, and their workaday words reflected their life -- words like laugh, farm, truck,
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Hi, The basic morphological form of a verb is the form that hasn´t taken any ends, usually the infinitive form. E.g.(to) walk to this basic form you can add different endings, such as -s for third person singular, -ed for past time, -ing for
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If you said ""mistune" (tune -> mistune), would you aspirate the T? I would, because it's part of a different part (morpheme?) I would probably aspirate that t at least a little, but not for the reason you give (I think). I
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No aspiration in any of these cases; dis c lose, mis t reat, Wis c onsin Hi, that's interesting. It seems everyone pronounces them their own way then. I saw (in a forum) several people aspirate the C in "disclose". As for
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