Overview
Linguistic morphology is the branch of linguistics concerned with the internal structure of words and the principles by which they are formed, analysed in terms of morphemes, the smallest units that carry meaning or grammatical function. It distinguishes free morphemes, which can stand alone, from bound morphemes such as affixes, and separates inflectional morphology, which marks grammatical categories like tense, number, and case without changing word class, from derivational morphology, which creates new lexemes and can shift category. Central concerns include processes of word formation such as affixation, compounding, reduplication, conversion, and blending, as well as the relationship between morphological form and phonological and syntactic structure. Theoretical accounts range from morpheme-based and word-based models to paradigm-oriented approaches, addressing allomorphy, productivity, and the boundary between morphology and the lexicon. Morphological analysis illuminates how languages package grammatical and lexical information, how typologically distinct systems, from isolating to agglutinative and fusional, organise that information, and how new words enter a language, including coinages in digital and contemporary registers. Its findings inform comparative and historical linguistics, language description, computational language processing, and the study of language acquisition. As a core component of grammar, morphology mediates between sound and meaning and underlies the systematic creativity of human vocabulary.
Research published in this journal
5 peer-reviewed articles, ranked by relevance. Each links to its DOI.