| Across |
| 7. |
Is the part of linguistics which studies words. |
| 8. |
Words that are formed from non-morphemic part of two already existing words. |
| 10. |
A relational specification which is found with adjectives and adverbs. |
| 12. |
The smallest unit of a word, which has a meaning, lexical or grammatical. |
| 14. |
General study concerns the duality aspects between sounds and words forms. |
| 15. |
Qualify verb, fast, slow, loud. |
| 16. |
An affix that appears inside the root. |
| 17. |
Morphemes with same form but different meanings. |
| 18. |
An affix that appears before the root. |
| 21. |
A category in the grammar of all languages which refers to more than one object. All languages have a particular means for expressing this category, frequently by using a characteristic inflection. |
| 22. |
A combining of a root with an affix. |
| 24. |
Roughly the non-phonetic written details of a language. |
| 26. |
One of the two major lexical categories the other is that of nouns which is used to express a state or an action. |
| 27. |
A morpheme that conveys the main meaning of the word. |
| 29. |
A word that contains more than one root. |
| 31. |
Indicate grammatical roles don’t change basic meaning of the word. |
| 37. |
A form which can be regarded as an exception to a given pattern or rule. |
| 38. |
A grammatical word — or affix — used to specify a noun as definite or indefinite. |
| 39. |
One of the major parts of speech which refers to objects in the non-linguistic world or to notions which are regarded as forming entities parallel to real-world objects. |
| 42. |
Collections of sounds (phones), and correlate with a language's speaking rhythm. |
| 43. |
On, in, out, up, from, about. |
| 44. |
A grammatical distinction which applies to the speaker, addressee or person talked about in verbal systems. |
| 45. |
An affix which wraps around the root. |
| 47. |
Any element which is postulated by the linguist but which has no realisation in language. |
| 48. |
When a root has one or more inflected morphemes which are phonetically unrelated to it. |