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OK, this looks as if my supposition was correct. What you want is English grammatical morphology in simple lists. There ... English (of course they are not as long since the whole business is simpler in English than in Spanish), e.g. Here's a
misc.education.language.english
by
peter t. daniels
3 yr 80 days ago
Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Careers, Business, Songs, Arts, Music, Languages, Morphology, Morphemes
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Anon2 here.
Anon1 has failed to respond to my challenge to come up with an
alternative analysis of Chinese that doesn't use words. Perhaps he/she
is:
1. Too busy.
2. Couldn't be bothered to deal with people who obviously "don't get
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Forbes wrote: I am at something of a disadvantage as I do not
know Chinese, only what I have read about it. I always used to read
that Chinese was monosyllabic, but apparently this is a misconception.
The misconception here is in what is
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Anonymous wrote: Although Chinese syllable structure is as you suggest, this is completely different from the importance of word structure. Words in Chinese are composed of a single syllable, whereas words in English and Spanish can be composed
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Soulwhisper wrote:
first of all....hi am a new member here
from saudi arabia...and am taking morphology...and i have few
questions need answers . first what can we consider the
word..writings..in the sentence HIS WRITINGS WAS PUBLISHED IN
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first of all....hi am a new member here from saudi arabia...and am taking morphology...and i have few questions need answers . first what can we consider the word..writings..in the sentence HIS WRITINGS WAS PUBLISHED IN ...is it right to say its
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Thanks... I guess that's the way it should be. The problem with dis-illusion is that "disillusion" is a verb and not a noun. 'Illusion' is of course a noun, but there's no way a verb can be created by adding dis- to a noun... This is what has me
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Hi, I study English at a Swedish university. I have some assignments to make, but they're difficult (for me, that is. You'll probably laugh). I stumpbled upon this board.. sorry for the intrusion.
We're supposed to draw "trees" to the following
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A word is made of three parts, prefix; root, stem, or base; and suffix.
Not really. For example, the and banana.
(1)precisely is pre + cise + ly (all three, prefix, root and suffix)
(2)concise is con + cise (prefix and root)
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To give an example that's at least related, Padraig recently ... is often seen as sexism or a relic of sexism. But then why do some women, avowed feminists, insist in being called "chairwoman", "policewoman", etc.? It is
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