Morpheme
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In morpheme-based morphology, a morpheme is the smallest linguistic unit that has semantic meaning. In spoken language, morphemes are composed of phonemes (the smallest linguistically distinctive units of sound), and in written language morphemes are composed of graphemes (the smallest units of written language). The concept morpheme differs from the concept word, as many morphemes cannot stand as words on their own. A morpheme is free if it can stand alone, or bound if it is used exclusively alongside a free morpheme. Its actual phonetic representation is the morph, with the morphs representing the same morpheme being grouped as its allomorphs.
The word "unbreakable" has three morphemes: "un-" (meaning not x), a bound morpheme; "-break-", a free morpheme; and "-able", a free morpheme. "un-" is also a prefix, "-able" is a suffix. Both are affixes. The morpheme plural-s has the morph "-s", IPA: [s], in cats ([kæts]), but "-es", [
Types of morphemes
Other variantsMorphological analysisIn natural language processing for Japanese, Chinese and other languages, morphological analysis is the process of segmenting a given sentence into a row of morphemes. It is closely related to Part-of-speech tagging, but word segmentation is required for these languages because word boundaries are not indicated by blank spaces. Famous Japanese morphological analysts include Juman and ChaSen. See also
References
External links
bg:Морфема ca:Morfema cs:Morfém cy:Morffem da:Morfem de:Morphem et:Morfeem es:Morfema eo:Morfemo fa:تکواژ fr:Morphème ga:Moirféim gl:Morfema ko:형태소 hsb:Morfem hr:Morfem io:Morfemo is:Myndan it:Morfema he:מורפמה ku:Morfîm hu:Morféma nl:Morfeem ja:形態素 no:Morfem nn:Morfem nov:Morfeme nds:Morphem pl:Morfem pt:Morfema ro:Morfem qu:Rimana yapaq ru:Морфема sk:Morféma fi:Morfeemi sv:Morfem tr:Biçimbirim uk:Морфема vec:Morfema wa:Morfinme |


