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Crotie3Ps Posted 12 years ago
Grammar

Principles to identify morphemes

can anyone help me to explain about this "forms that have a common semantic distinctiveness but differ in phonemic forms in such a way that their distribution cannot be phonologically defined constitute a single morpheme if the forms are in complementary distribution in accordance with the following restrictions : Occurence, Complementary distribution, Immediate tactical environtments and Contrast in identical distributional environtments".
  

Top answer

Such a complicated definition! Is a good example for people that hate grammar, as me! edu/ntid/rate/sea/processes/wordknowledge/grammatical/whatare But I'm sorry, can't get the exact meaning of so puzzling text!

  • Such a complicated definition!
  • Is a good example for people that hate grammar, as me!
  • edu/ntid/rate/sea/processes/wordknowledge/grammatical/whatare But I'm sorry, can't get the exact meaning of so puzzling text!
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3 Answers
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Such a complicated definition! Is a good example for people that hate grammar, as me! Emotion: boxing
I have found an easy definition of m
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Sir, this is the 3rd principle to identify morphemes. i really cant get this from my sir so i ask about this here, wish a luck, hehe...
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i know what it means but send me an e-mail I will explain it right Email Removed

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