Study of Language week2_VT_oud

Study of language; week 2
Morphology & Semantics
1 / 20
volgende
Slide 1: Tekstslide
HBOStudiejaar 2

In deze les zitten 20 slides, met interactieve quizzen en tekstslides.

Onderdelen in deze les

Study of language; week 2
Morphology & Semantics

Slide 1 - Tekstslide

recap week 1
chapter 1: origins of language
chapter 5: word formation
Learning aims:
  • You know a number of theories on the origin of language and you understand the ideas behind these theories.
  • You know the main processes involved in the introduction of new words into a language.
  • You can link these processes to examples.

Slide 2 - Tekstslide

Learning aims:
By the end of this session you will be able to: 
  • explain what morphemes are 
  • identify morphemes in words and sentences 
  • recognize and name semantic/lexical relations between words. 

Slide 3 - Tekstslide

chapter 6
Morphology

Slide 4 - Tekstslide

morphemes
morphemes are the smallest units of language still having meaning or grammatical function.
There are free morphemes, that can stand alone and bound morphemes that need to be attached to a free morpheme.

Slide 5 - Tekstslide

How many morphemes?
The girls quickly walked down the uneven path.
A
7
B
10
C
12
D
13

Slide 6 - Quizvraag

Free morphemes:

lexical: nouns, verbs, adverbs, adjectives,..

functional: pronouns, prepostions, articles, conjunctions, auxiliary verbs, etc
Bound morphemes:
derivational
changes meaning and/or word class, e.g. dis-, un-, im-, -less, ness, etc
inflectional: has a grammatical function: -s, -ing, er, etc

Slide 7 - Tekstslide


My sister always likes to eat many biscuits.
How many lexical & how many functional morphemes?
A
4 + 4
B
3 + 5
C
5 + 3
D
4 + 5

Slide 8 - Quizvraag


The unkind brothers decided to sell their parents' wonderful garage.
How many derivational inflectional morphemes?
A
2 + 3
B
2 + 4
C
3 + 3
D
3 + 4

Slide 9 - Quizvraag

functional morpheme
lexical morpheme
inflectional morpheme
derivational morpheme
happy
ing
look
was
she
d
place
mis
sister
er
old
the
after
un
her
rabbit
s
quite

Slide 10 - Sleepvraag

chapter 9
Semantics

Slide 11 - Tekstslide

meaning: 
referential or associative/emotive

Slide 12 - Tekstslide

lexical relations: 

Slide 13 - Tekstslide

lexical relations
Synonyms 
Antonyms 

Hyponyms / Prototypes 
Metonymy 
Collocation
Homophones  
Homonyms  
Polysemy

Slide 14 - Tekstslide

synonyms
antonyms;
gradable
antonyms:
non-gradable
reversives
leave
enter
old
true
nice
agreable
new
 false

Slide 15 - Sleepvraag

hyponyms/
co-hyponyms
  • hyponym = a kind of ....
  • a daisy is a hyponym for flower
  • daisy & violet a co-hyponyms
rose is the prototype ("best" example)
flower is the superordinate
flower
Hyponomy

  • a Hyponym is "a kind of..."
  • Daisy is a hyponym of flower
  • Daisy and violet are co-hyponyms
  • Flower is the superordinate
  • The most characteristic hyponym = prototype


Slide 16 - Tekstslide

what did you think of the date?
homonyms
polysemy

Slide 17 - Tekstslide

homophones
homonyms
polysemy

Slide 18 - Sleepvraag

metonomy & collocation
metonymy
He drank the whole bottle?
collocation:
words that "belong" together


Slide 19 - Tekstslide

next week
chapter 10: Pragmatics
chapter 11: Discourse analysis

Slide 20 - Tekstslide