Friday, April 22, 2016

free morpheme berdasarkan tiga references

Summary of Free Morpheme
1.      According to Francis Katamba free:
 morphem is many words contain a root standing on its own. Roots which are capable of standing independently. A root is the irreducible core of a word, with absolutely nothing else attached to it. It is the part that is always present, possibly with some modification, in the various manifestations of a lexeme. For example, walk is a root and it appears in the set of word-forms that instantiate the lexeme walik such as walk, walks, walking and walked. Example of free morphemes: man, book, tea. Single words like those are the smallest free morphemes capable of occurring in isolation. Many other free morphemes are function words. These differ from lexical morphemes in that while the lexical morphemes carry most of the 'semantic content', the function words mainly (but not exclusively) signalgrammatical information or logical relations in a sentence. Distinguishing between lexical and grammatical morphemes is normally both useful and straightforward. However, there are cases where this distinction is blurred. This is because there are free morphemes (simple words) which do not fit neatly into either category. For example, a conjunction like though signals a logical relationship and at the same time appears to have considerably more 'descriptive semantic content' than, say, the article the.
2.      According to Mark Aronoff and Kirsten:
            Fudeman free morphem is consist of a word, such as hand, or a meaningful piece of a word, such as the -ed of looked, that cannot be divided into smaller meaningful parts. Another way in which morphemes have been defined is as a pairing between sound and meaning. We have purposely chosen not to use this definition. Some morphemes have no concrete form or no continuous form, as we will see, and some do not have meanings in the conventional sense of the term. For example, reconsideration. We can break it into three morphemes: re-, consider, and -ation. Consider is called the stem. A stem is a base unit to which another morphological piece is attached. The stem can be simple, made up of only one part, or complex, itselfmade up of more than one piece. Here it is best to consider consider a simple stem. Although it consists historically of more than one part, most present-day speakers would treat it as an unanalyzable form. We could also call consider the root. A root is like a stem in constituting the core of the word to which other pieces attach, but the term refers only to morphologically simple units. The existence of infixes challenges the traditional notion of a morpheme as an indivisible unit. We want to call the stem sulat ‘write’ a morpheme, and yet the infix -um- breaks it up. This seems to be a property of –umrather than sulat. Our definition of morphemes as the smallest linguistic pieces with a grammatical function survives this challenge.
3.      According to Andrew Carstairs-McCarthy :
            free morphem is morphemes that can stand on their own. For example, There are two reasons for calling help the core of this word. One is that help supplies the most precise and concrete element in its meaning, shared by a family of related words like helper, helpless, helplessness and unhelpful that differ from one another in more abstract ways. Another reason is that, of the three morphemes in helpfulness, only help can stand on its own – that is, only help can, in an appropriate context, constitute an utterance by itself. That is clearly not true of -ness, nor is it true of -ful. (Historically -ful is indeed related to the word full, but their divergence in modern English is evident if one compares words like helpful and cheerful with other words that really do contain full, such as half-full and chock-full.). A salient characteristic of English – a respect in which English differs from many other languages – is that a high proportion of complex words are like helpfulness and un-Clintonish in that they have a free morpheme (like help and Clintoni) at their core. Example of free moprhemes is read, hear, large, perform, white and dark. In everyday vocabulary, it is found in only one other word, namely illegible, the negative counterpart of legible. And it is absolutely true of the morphemes cran-, huckle- and gorm- in cranberry, huckleberry and gormless. Cranberry and huckleberry are compounds whose second element is clearly the free morpheme berry, occurring in several other compounds such as strawberry, blackberry and blueberry; however, cran- and huckle- occur nowhere outside these compounds. In the native Germanic portion of the vocabulary, the root of a complex word is usually free.


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