Category:Ojibwe bound morphemes

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Bound morphemes are the smallest linguistic unit within a word that can carry a meaning. They can only occur when bound to a another morpheme.

Ojibwe is a polysynthetic language. Bound morphemes play many functions in Ojibwe's rich derivational morhoplogy, and can be classified into the following groups:

  • Word stems can include the following stem-building elements:
    initials (often called roots) - convey a concrete meaning that is often rendered in English by an adjective or an adverb
    medials - an optional element that conveys information about things or kinds of things associated with the verb (classification, body part, etc.)
    finals - can have a concrete or abstract meaning, including information about what class of noun or verb the word is
  • Preverbs are prefixed to a verb or noun stem, and can convey information about tense, mode, aspect, time, direction, etc. or can add lexical information.
  • Inflectional morphemes can be suffixed to:
    verbs, to indicate person, mood, order, etc
    nouns, to indicate number, focus, possession, and there are pejorative, locative, diminutive forms

Subcategories

This category has the following 4 subcategories, out of 4 total.

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