| morpheme |
The smallest unit of language that is grammatically significant. Morphemes may be bound, ie they cannot exist on their own; eg -er,un-, -ed, mis- ; or they can be free, as is ball in football.
Ãâó: www.finchpark.com/courses/glossary.htm
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| morpheme |
The smallest meaningful unit of a word. The word dog is one morpheme. The word dogs is two morphemes: dog + the plural marker s. Many ideographic are based on morphemes.
Ãâó: www.stevenblack.com/intl%20glossary.html
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| morpheme |
A word such as wait, or a part of a word, as ed in waited, not further divisible into a meaningful part.
Ãâó: www.greaterthings.com/Word-Number/AreaCodes/801_Mo...
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| morpheme |
[noun] A morpheme is the smallest meaningful element of language ie as a semantic element it cannot be divided into smaller elements.
Ãâó: portal.bibliotekivest.no/terminology.htm
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| morpheme |
In linguistics, any word or word part that conveys meaning, cannot be divided into smaller elements conveying meaning, and usually occurs in a variety of contexts with relatively stable meaning.
Ãâó: naming.com/resources.html
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