Bound morpheme
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| - | In [[linguistics]], '''periphrasis''' ([[Greek language|Greek]] ''peri'' as a preposition means "around, about, beyond") is a device by which a [[grammatical category]] or grammatical relationship is expressed by a [[free morpheme]] (typically one or more [[function word]]s modifying a [[content word]]), instead of being shown by [[inflection]] or [[derivation (linguistics)|derivation]]. For example, the [[English language|English]] future tense is periphrastic: it is formed with an [[auxiliary verb]] (''shall'' or ''will'') followed by the base form of the main verb. Another example is the [[comparative]] and [[superlative]] forms of adjectives, when they are formed with the words ''more'' and ''most'' rather than with the [[suffix]]es ''-er'' and ''-est'': the forms ''more beautiful'' and ''most beautiful'' are periphrastic, while ''lovelier'' and ''loveliest'' are not. | + | In [[Morphology (linguistics)|morphology]], a '''bound morpheme''' is a [[morpheme]] that only appears as part of a larger word; a '''free''' or '''unbound''' morpheme is one that can stand alone. |
| - | + | ==See also== | |
| - | Periphrasis is a characteristic of [[analytic language]]s, which tend to avoid inflection. Even [[synthetic language]]s, which are highly inflected, sometimes make use of periphrasis to fill out an inflectional paradigm that is missing certain forms. | + | *[[Fixed expression]] |
| - | == See also == | + | *[[Fossil word]] |
| - | * [[Adposition]] | + | *[[Unpaired word]] |
| - | * [[Analytic language]] | + | |
| - | * [[Compound verb]] | + | |
| - | * [[Deflexion (linguistics)]] | + | |
| - | * [[Grammatical particle]] | + | |
| - | * [[Phrase]] | + | |
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In morphology, a bound morpheme is a morpheme that only appears as part of a larger word; a free or unbound morpheme is one that can stand alone.
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Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Bound morpheme" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on original research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.
