Showing posts with label grapheme. Show all posts
Showing posts with label grapheme. Show all posts

Saturday, 26 July 2025

13 Concepts from Morphology that every KPSC HSA English Aspirant Should Know! (Based on Previous Question Paper)

Concepts from Morphology


  1. A morpheme is the minimal meaningful unit in a language. For example the word 'human', 'legal' 'mortal' are morphemes. 

  2. Two types of Morphemes.Morphemes are categorized into two types: lexical (or content) and functional (or grammatical). 

  3. Lexical morphemes are morphemes that carry the main semantic meaning of a word. They are typically nouns, verbs, adjectives, and adverbs, forming the core vocabulary of a language. Examples: Nouns: cat, house, tree, joy. Verbs: run, eat, sleep, think Adjectives: happy, blue, tall, sad

  4. Functional morphemes are words that have little meaning on their own but serve to express grammatical relationships between other words in a sentence. They include prepositions (e.g., on, of), articles (e.g., the, a), conjunctions (e.g., and), and pronouns (e.g., them).

  5. Allomorphs are the phonetically variant forms of a morpheme. Example- 1. The plural morpheme -s/-es is phonologically realized in words cats, dogs and watches as /s/, /z/ and /iz/ respectively. The same morpheme has different phonetic representation, hence they are the allomorphs of 'plural morpheme -s'

  6. Clitic.  A clitic is a morpheme that is grammatically a word but cannot stand on its own phonologically and attaches to another word. An example is the possessive 's in "John's book."

  7. A grapheme is the smallest unit in a writing system (a letter or a combination of letters) that represents a single sound (phoneme). 

  8. A digraph is a specific type of grapheme where two letters are used together to represent one sound, such as 'sh' in "ship" or 'ph' in "photo".

  9. Back-formation Back-formation is a word-formation process where a new word (typically a verb) is created by removing an affix from an existing word (usually a noun). For example, the verb "televise" was created from the noun "television" by removing what was mistakenly thought to be a suffix.

  10.  Hyponymy. Hyponymy is a term in linguistics that describes a specific kind of semantic relationship between words where the meaning of a more specific word (the hyponym) is included within the meaning of a more general word (the hypernym). For example the word for a specific flower 'rose' (hyponym) is included in the general word flower (hypernym).

  11.  Semantics. Semantics is the the study of meanings in a language

  12. Polysemy. Polysemy is defined as “one form having multiple meanings which are all related by extension. Polysemous words will have a single entry with a numbered list of the different meanings of the word. Examples: the word Head may mean human head, department head, a place of entry in accounting.

  13. Homonym. Homonyms are two or more different lexemes (a meaningful word) which have the same form but are unrelated in meaning.