Affix: Difference between revisions
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'''Affixes''' are divided into several categories, depending on their position and their role with reference to the root. The most important positional categories are: | |||
*prefix (PFX) - Appears at the front of the root (such as "un-" in "undo", or "re-" in "rewrite") | |||
*suffix (SFX) - Appears at the back of the root (such "-s" in "tables", or "-er" in "writer") | |||
*infix (IFX) - Appears within the root (very rare in English, such as "-ma-" in "sophistimacated") | |||
*circumfix (CCX) - Appears at the front and at the back of the root (very rare in English, such as "a-" + "-ed" in "ascattered") | |||
As for their roles, there are two main different types of affixes: | |||
* inflectional affix - assign grammatical properties (such as number, gender, tense, person) to the root in order to form the different word forms of the same lexeme ("-s" in "tables", "-ed" in "loved") | |||
* derivational affix - form a new lexeme by modifying the meaning (and sometimes the category) of the root ("un-" in "unhappy", "-ness" in "happiness"). | |||
Revision as of 13:33, 20 May 2010
Affixes are divided into several categories, depending on their position and their role with reference to the root. The most important positional categories are:
- prefix (PFX) - Appears at the front of the root (such as "un-" in "undo", or "re-" in "rewrite")
- suffix (SFX) - Appears at the back of the root (such "-s" in "tables", or "-er" in "writer")
- infix (IFX) - Appears within the root (very rare in English, such as "-ma-" in "sophistimacated")
- circumfix (CCX) - Appears at the front and at the back of the root (very rare in English, such as "a-" + "-ed" in "ascattered")
As for their roles, there are two main different types of affixes:
- inflectional affix - assign grammatical properties (such as number, gender, tense, person) to the root in order to form the different word forms of the same lexeme ("-s" in "tables", "-ed" in "loved")
- derivational affix - form a new lexeme by modifying the meaning (and sometimes the category) of the root ("un-" in "unhappy", "-ness" in "happiness").