Affix

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(Affixes and Roots)
 
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'''Affixes''' are divided into several categories, depending on their position and their role with reference to the root. The most important positional categories are:
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An '''affix''' is a morpheme that is attached to a word stem to form a new word.  
  
*prefix (PFX) - Appears at the front of the root (such as "un-" in "undo", or "re-" in "rewrite")
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== Types ==
*suffix (SFX) - Appears at the back of the root (such "-s" in "tables", or "-er" in "writer")
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Affixes may be derivational or inflectional.
*infix (IFX) - Appears within the root (very rare in English, such as "-ma-" in "sophistimacated")
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*'''Inflectional''' affixes assign grammatical properties (such as number, gender, tense, person) to the stem in order to form the different word forms of the same lexeme ("-s" in "tables", "-ed" in "loved")
*circumfix (CCX) - Appears at the front and at the back of the root (very rare in English, such as "a-" + "-ed" in "ascattered")  
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*'''Derivational''' affixes form a new lexeme by modifying the meaning (and sometimes the category) of the root ("un-" in "unhappy", "-ness" in "happiness").
  
As for their roles, there are two main different types of affixes:
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== Position ==
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Affixes are divided depending on their position with reference to the stem
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*prefix (PFX) - Appears at the front of the stem (such as "un-" in "undo", or "re-" in "rewrite")
 +
*suffix (SFX) - Appears at the back of the stem (such "-s" in "tables", or "-er" in "writer")
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*infix (IFX) - Appears within the stem (very rare in English, such as "-ma-" in "sophistimacated")
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*circumfix (CCX) - Appears at the front and at the back of the stem (very rare in English, such as "a-" + "-ed" in "ascattered")
  
* inflectional affix - assign grammatical properties (such as number, gender, tense, person) to the root in order to form the different word forms of the same lexeme ("-s" in "tables", "-ed" in "loved")
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== Affixes and Roots ==
* derivational affix - form a new lexeme by modifying the meaning (and sometimes the category) of the root ("un-" in "unhappy", "-ness" in "happiness").
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In the UNL<sup>arium</sup> framework, affixes are differentiated from roots in the sense that affixes are considered to be semantically bound and, therefore, are represented by attributes, whereas roots are considered to be semantically free and, therefore, are represented by UW's. Consider, for instance, the examples below:
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*un- is considered to be semantically bound (i.e., it is only a modifier of the root) and, therefore, a prefix (to be represented by the attribute @not): undo = do.@not
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*-s is considered to be semantically bound (i.e., it is only a modifier of the root) and, therefore, a suffix (to be represented by the attribute @pl): tables = table.@pl
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*geo- is considered to be semantically free (i.e., it has an autonomous meaning = earth) and, therefore, a root (to be represented by a UW): geophysics = geo + physics (and not physics.@geo)
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*-phobia is considered to be semantically free (i.e., it has an autonomous meaning = fear) and, therefore, a root (to be represented by a UW): googlephobia = google + phobia (and not google.@phobia)

Latest revision as of 22:09, 12 August 2013

An affix is a morpheme that is attached to a word stem to form a new word.

Types

Affixes may be derivational or inflectional.

  • Inflectional affixes assign grammatical properties (such as number, gender, tense, person) to the stem in order to form the different word forms of the same lexeme ("-s" in "tables", "-ed" in "loved")
  • Derivational affixes form a new lexeme by modifying the meaning (and sometimes the category) of the root ("un-" in "unhappy", "-ness" in "happiness").

Position

Affixes are divided depending on their position with reference to the stem

  • prefix (PFX) - Appears at the front of the stem (such as "un-" in "undo", or "re-" in "rewrite")
  • suffix (SFX) - Appears at the back of the stem (such "-s" in "tables", or "-er" in "writer")
  • infix (IFX) - Appears within the stem (very rare in English, such as "-ma-" in "sophistimacated")
  • circumfix (CCX) - Appears at the front and at the back of the stem (very rare in English, such as "a-" + "-ed" in "ascattered")

Affixes and Roots

In the UNLarium framework, affixes are differentiated from roots in the sense that affixes are considered to be semantically bound and, therefore, are represented by attributes, whereas roots are considered to be semantically free and, therefore, are represented by UW's. Consider, for instance, the examples below:

  • un- is considered to be semantically bound (i.e., it is only a modifier of the root) and, therefore, a prefix (to be represented by the attribute @not): undo = do.@not
  • -s is considered to be semantically bound (i.e., it is only a modifier of the root) and, therefore, a suffix (to be represented by the attribute @pl): tables = table.@pl
  • geo- is considered to be semantically free (i.e., it has an autonomous meaning = earth) and, therefore, a root (to be represented by a UW): geophysics = geo + physics (and not physics.@geo)
  • -phobia is considered to be semantically free (i.e., it has an autonomous meaning = fear) and, therefore, a root (to be represented by a UW): googlephobia = google + phobia (and not google.@phobia)
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