Essay from Yunusova Khodisa

Andijan State Institute of Foreign Languages
Foreign Language and Literature, German Language Direction
Student of Group 402 Yunusova Khodisa
Scientific Advisor Ismanova Odinakhon


Morphological construction of a word: types and classes of morphemes. Diachronic and synchronic view of word structure. Morpheme and allomorphemes.


Abstract: This article analyzes the morphological construction of a word, that is, the types and classes of morphemes, which are the smallest meaningful parts of a word. Also, approaches to word structure from the diachronic (historical development) and synchronic (current state) points of view are studied. The article also examines in detail the concepts of morpheme and allomorpheme, their differences from each other and their scope.


Annotation: This article analyzes the morphological structure of words, focusing on the types and classifications of morphemes—the smallest meaningful units of language. It explores both diachronic (historical development) and synchronic (current state) approaches to word structure. The article also discusses the concepts of morpheme and allomorph, highlighting their differences and usage in linguistic analysis.


Abstract: V dannoy state rassmatrivaetsya morfologicheskoe stroenie slova, a imenno tipy i klassifikatsii morphem — naimenshikh znachimyx edinits zyzyka. Analyziruyutsya diachronichesky (historical development) and synchronic (modern state) approaches to the structure of words. Takje podzlo rassmatrivayutsya concepts of morphemy and allomorphy, ix razlichiya i oblasti primeneniya v lingvistike.


Keywords: morphological structure, morpheme, allomorph, word formation, diachronic approach, synchronic approach, linguistic analysis

Morphology studies word classes, their grammatical meanings, grammatical categories specific to each class, grammatical forms and grammatical meanings that give rise to these categories, and the structure of the word. Just as a language consists of a system, its morphology also forms its own system. In turn, the morphological system also consists of its own sub-systems. By elucidating the essence of each of them, the morphology of the language is studied as a whole, as a system. The internal system (subsystem) specific to each word class is formed by morphological categories specific to this class. Morphological categories consist of a unity of general and specific meanings specific to a particular phenomenon and word forms expressing these meanings.

The essence of certain morphological categories is determined by the clarification of these word forms and their general and specific meanings. In other words, the essence of one of the internal systems within the morphological system is determined. For example, the tense category of a verb constitutes a separate system in the M. of the verb. Therefore, the expression “system of verb tenses” is also used in relation to the tenses of the verb. The essence of the tense category of the verb, the tense system, is that all tense forms express the relationship of the action to the time of speech (moment of speech). This is a feature common to all tense forms.

At the same time, the verb form (forms) of each tense have their own specific characteristics. For example, past tense forms indicate that the action took place before the time of speech, present tense forms indicate that the action took place during the time of speech, and future tense forms indicate that the action took place after the time of speech. These common and specific features of verb tense forms are the essence of the tense category, the system of verb tenses.

Therefore, by determining the essence of each morphological category related to the verb class, the morphological system of the verb is illuminated. In linguistics, morphology is the study of words, how they are formed, and how they relate to other words in the language. It studies the structure and parts of words, such as the root, stem, prefix, and suffix. Morphology also studies the ways in which word classes, intonation, stress, and context change the pronunciation and meaning of words. Morphology is distinct from the morphological classification system, which classifies languages ​​according to the way words are used, and from lexicology, which studies how words and their structures make up the vocabulary of a language. Phonological and orthographic changes between a root word and its derivation can affect literacy skills.

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