Morphology - an introduction
In this lesson, students explore word morphology. Morphology is an area of language study concerned with how words are
formed. While syntax is about the larger structures formed when words
are put together, morphology is about the structure within words.
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Morphology - an introduction: Activity 1
Activity 1: Finding word parts
From the list below, pick out the words that are complex. Can you break them down into meaningful parts?
- bread
- sunshine
- fossil
- sleepwalker
- unhappy
- umbrella
- rebuild
- laughing
There are some further questions on the next slide.
Now look at the parts of the words that you have found. Which ones can be used on their own?
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Morphology - an introduction: Activity 2
Activity 2: Same word or different words?
Would you say the following are different words or the same word?
- hesitate, hesitates, hesitated, hesitating
It depends what we mean by ‘word’! In one everyday sense, they are all different words.
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Morphology - an introduction: Activity 3
Activity 3: How many words?
Look at the sentence below and answer the following questions:
- How many different words, in the sense of dictionary words, are there?
- Which items can be grouped together as forms of the same word?
- I think teasing tigers is unwise, because I teased a tiger once and barely escaped alive.
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