📚 A morpheme is the smallest unit of meaning in a language.
🔢 Words can contain multiple morphemes, such as comparative and plural morphemes.
🤔 Some morphemes may not appear on their own but still have a meaning when attached to a word.
📚 Morphemes are the smallest units of meaning in a word.
🔀 Some words have affixes like suffixes and prefixes which change the meaning or function of the root word.
🧠 Understanding the composition of morphemes helps decipher the meaning and structure of words.
🔑 There are two types of morphemes: free morphemes and bound morphemes.
💡 Free morphemes can stand alone as words in a sentence, while bound morphemes modify or attach to other words.
📚 Bound morphemes can be prefixes, suffixes, or infixes, indicated by specific symbols or letters.
📝 Free morphemes can stand alone as words, while bound morphemes need to be attached to other words.
🔠 Affixes, such as prefixes and suffixes, are bound morphemes that change or maintain the lexical categories of words.
✂️ Prefixes attach to the beginning of words, while suffixes attach to the end.
🔑 Affixes like 'vividly' and 'clueless' can change the word type and category of free morphemes.
🧩 Example in Tagalog demonstrates the transformation of 'buy' to 'bot' through the addition of a morpheme.
📚 In linguistics, affixes are used to modify words, such as adding a plural 's' to 'book'.
🌕 Infixes are a type of affix that goes in the middle of words, like the past tense 'ni' infix.
🖊️ Bound morphemes must be attached to free morphemes or other bound morphemes to create words.
🔑 There are two types of morphemes: free and bound.
✏️ Suffixes can change the lexical category of a word.
🌍 Morphemes can work differently in different languages.