expressing grammatical meanings: 3
rd
person singular past tense, whereas in
qutila - he was killed
vowels
u-i-a
indicates 3rd person singular past tense in
passive voice. The second type of inflection is about using endings after the root
expressing different grammatical meanings, for example,
Russian
поле - field,
поля - fields, полей - of fields
, etc.
The presence of external and internal inflection is an important stable sign
of languages. Other such signs are: the multifunctionality of grammatical
morphemes, the presence of fusion, phonetically unreasonable root changes, a
large number of phonetically and semantically unmotivated types of declination
and conjugation.
Indo-European, Semitic-Hamitic languages belong to the
inflective type; they also have signs of agglutinative languages. Inflective
languages include languages that occupy a different place in the genealogical
classification. Morphological typology does not take into account kinship. Its
classification criterion is the form of the word change and the relationship of the
word and sentence. The presence of affixes is also characteristic of
agglutinative
languages, but in these two morphological types of languages external flexion has
significant differences. Flexion in inflected languages has the following features:
1) Morphological homonymy.
morpheme
-e
in German: a) is ending of first person singular verb in Present tense
(
Ich
lerne – I learn
); c) is added to the present or past verb stem to create a
feminine noun (
haben/die Habe – to have/ belongings
); d) is ending of adjectives
for feminine nouns in singular (
gute Mutter – a good mother
).
2) The synthetic nature of affixes is combination of several different values
in one morpheme. In other words affixes of inflected languages are polysemantic
(personal endings of verbs in German, for example, in the verb
machst
- he does
the ending -
st
is one morpheme, combines 2 grammatical meanings: a) a second
person; 2) in singular;
in Russian
иду
-
I am coming
the ending
-у
indicates 3
grammatical meanings: 1) first person; 2) singular; 3) present tense; 4) indicative
mood;).
3) Another sign of inflection is the expression of one grammatical meaning
in different forms,
it means, morphemes sometimes can be synonyms (the
expression of plural number in German occurs using three suffixes and inner
inflection - umlaut:
Nächte (nights), Häuser (houses), Menschen (people),
so as
in English, external inflexion:
books,
inner inflection:
men,
and
children
is a rare
exception, where to indicate the number both external and internal inflexions are
used).
Inflectional languages are characterized by internal inflection. For instant,
alternating consonants in the root: in German
schneiden - schnitt - geschnitten
(cut-cut-cut)
; spontaneous alternation of vowels in the root: in Russian
день-дня-
днём (day-day`s-in the daytime)
or historically explained sound alternation: in
English
goose - geese,
in German (umlaut):
Baum - Bäume
(tree-trees)
.
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: