Tuesday, December 31, 2019
What is Affixation in English Grammar
In English grammar and morphology, affixation is the process of adding a morphemeââ¬âor affixââ¬âto a word to create either a different form of that word or a new word with a different meaning; affixation is the mostà common way of making new words in English.à The two primary kinds of affixation are prefixation, the addition of aà prefix,à and suffixation, the addition of a suffix, while clusters of affixes can be used to form complex words. A large majority of new words in the English language today are either a result of blendingââ¬âmashing two words or partial words together to form a new oneââ¬âor affixation.à Uses of Affixes An affix is a word element of English grammar used to alter the meaning or form of a word and comes in the form of either a prefix or a suffix. Prefixes include examples like un-, self-, and re-, while suffixes come in the form of ending elements like -hood, -ing, or -ed.à While prefixes typically maintain the word class (such as noun, verb, or adjective) of the word its modifying, suffixes oftentimes change the form entirely, as is the case with exploration compared to explore or highlighter compared to highlight. Multiple Iterations You can use multiple iterations of the same affixation to modify a word like grandmother to mean an entirely different personââ¬âas in great-great-grandmother, who would be your mothers mothers mothers motherââ¬âor a re-re-re-make of a film, wherein this film would be the fourth iteration of its kind. The same can be applied to different prefixes and suffixes being used on the same word. For instance, the word nation means a country, but national means of a nation, nationalize means to make part of a nation, and denationalization means the process of making something no longer part of a nation. This can continue ad nauseam but becomes increasingly oddââ¬âespecially in spoken rhetoricââ¬âthe more affixes you use on the same base word. Affixation vs. Blending One form of word alteration and invention that is commonly mistaken for affixation is the process of blending words to form new ones, most notably present in the example of the marketing term cranapple, where people naturally assume the root word cran- from cranberry is being applied as an affix.à However, affixes must be able to be universally attached to other morphemes and still make sense. This is not the case with the cran- root, which is only seen attached to another morpheme in marketing examples of juices that also contain cranberry juice like crangrape and cranapple. Instead of being a stand-alone morpheme which conveys of cranberry, the suffix cran- can only make sense when applied to other juices and is therefore considered a blend of two reduced words (cranberry and apple). Though some words and prefixes can be both stand-alone morphemes or parts of blended words, meaning the phrases arent necessarily mutually exclusive, most often words that are products of blending do not contain any actual productive affixes.
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