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AFFIXATION AND NOUN-FORMING MODELS

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Abstract

Affixation is the formation of words by adding derivational affixes to different types of bases. An affix is not a root or a bound morpheme that modifies the meaning and/or syntactic category of the stem in some way. Affixes are classified into prefixes and suffixes. Word formation is the system of derivative types of words and the process of creating new words from the material available in the language after certain structural and semantic formulas and patterns. An affix is a grammatical element that is combined with a word, stem, or phrase to produce derived or inflected forms. There are three main types of affixes: prefixes, infixes, and suffixes. A prefix occurs at the beginning of a word or stem (submit, pre-determine, un-willing); a suffix at the end (wonderful, depend-ent, act-ion); and an infix occurs in the middle. English has no infixes, but they are found in American Indian languages, Greek, Tagalog, and elsewhere. An example from Tagalog is the alteration of the form sulat, “a writing,” to the form sinulat, “that which was written,” through the addition of an infix, -in-. English inflectional suffixes are illustrated by the -s of “cats,” the -er of “longer,” and the -ed of “asked.” A circumfix consists of a prefix and a suffix that together produce a derived or inflected form, as in the English word enlighten. [1]

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To‘lqinjanova Nilufar To‘lqinjanovna. (2023). AFFIXATION AND NOUN-FORMING MODELS. "ONLINE - CONFERENCES&Quot; PLATFORM, 366–370. Retrieved from https://papers.online-conferences.com/index.php/titfl/article/view/1351
  • Submitted
    18 September 2023
  • Revised
    18 September 2023
  • Published
    17 September 2023