Published April 30, 2021 | Version v1
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MORPHOLOGICAL STRUCTURE OF ENGLISH WORDS. MORPHEMES. FREE AND BOUND FORMS, MORPHOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION OF WORDS, WORD-FAMILIES

  • 1. 1st year student of the Department of English Philology, Samarkand State Institute of Foreign Languages, Faculty of Romance-German

Description

The present study aims to determine whether semantic relatedness plays a role in the production of speech errors involving derivational morphemes. A word order competition technique was used to induce morpheme and syllable exchange errors. Semantic relatedness was manipulated by contrasting error rates for prefixed words derived from free stems to those derived from bound roots.

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References

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  • 2. Bybee, J., & Slobin, D. (1982). Rules and schemas in the development and use of English past tense. Language
  • 3. Caramazza, A. (1997). How many levels of processing are there in lexical access? Cognitive Neuropsychology
  • 4. Carstairs-McCarthy, A. (1992). Morphology without word-internal constituents Booij & J. van Marle (Eds.), Yearbook of morphology 1992 (pp. 209–233). Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers.
  • 5. Cutler, A. (1980). Errors of stress and intonation. In V. Fromkin (Ed.), Errors in linguistic performance: Slips of the tongue, ear, pen, and hand (pp. 67–80). New York: Academic Press. Dell, G. (1986). A spreading activation theory of retrieval in sentence production. Psychological Review