Across
- 7. A grammatical category which indicates a single occurrence of something.
- 8. The smallest unit of a word, which has a meaning, lexical or grammatical.
- 11. The morpheme that never occurs as a word on its own.
- 13. An affix that appears inside the root.
- 15. A grammatical word — or affix — used to specify a noun as definite or indefinite.
- 16. Collections of sounds (phones), and correlate with a language's speaking rhythm.
- 20. One of the two major lexical categories the other is that of nouns which is used to express a state or an action.
- 21. Any element which is postulated by the linguist but which has no realisation in language.
- 22. Indicate grammatical roles don’t change basic meaning of the word.
- 24. An affix that appears after the root.
- 25. When a root has one or more inflected morphemes which are phonetically unrelated to it.
- 26. Is the part of linguistics which studies words.
- 27. Unit of meaning. Free morpheme.
- 31. General study concerns the duality aspects between sounds and words forms.
- 33. A form class often marked in English by the ability to take the comparative and the superlative suffixes.
- 34. The smallest unit of language sounds which can differ the meaning.
- 35. Proper noun becomes a common noun.
- 37. A term which refers to the inflections of nouns, pronouns, adjectives.
- 39. On, in, out, up, from, about.
- 42. When added to a word, make or derive a new word with a new meaning, something changed.
- 45. 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.
- 46. A form which can be regarded as an exception to a given pattern or rule.
- 47. The morpheme that is added to a root to modify the meaning.
- 49. Morphemes with same form but different meanings.
Down
- 1. Qualify verb, fast, slow, loud.
- 2. A word that contains more than one root.
- 3. The study of language.
- 4. 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.
- 5. They proceed nouns in English (a, the, some).
- 6. The tendency for words in a language to have many morphemes.
- 9. A combining of a root with an affix.
- 10. Affixes don't change form when combined.
- 12. A morpheme that can stand alone as a word.
- 14. Roughly the non-phonetic written details of a language.
- 17. Mental dictionary. It list phonemes in its phonemic form.
- 18. One of linguistics fields which discuss about word forming.
- 19. The alternate forms of a morpheme with the same meaning.
- 23. A sound is changed and it produces a morphological change (tense, number, category, etc).
- 28. A process which a word or part of a word is repeated.
- 29. A relational specification which is found with adjectives and adverbs.
- 30. Words that are formed from non-morphemic part of two already existing words.
- 32. A grammatical distinction which applies to the speaker, addressee or person talked about in verbal systems.
- 36. A morpheme that conveys the main meaning of the word.
- 38. An inflection which indicates the relationship of a noun to other elements in a sentence.
- 40. An affix which wraps around the root.
- 41. Assigning the base to a different word-class without changing its form.
- 43. A part of a word to which prefixes and/or suffixes can be added.
- 44. Any item of language which cannot be broken down any further without a loss of meaning.
- 48. An affix that appears before the root.
