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Morpheme | |
noun | 1. A meaningful morphological unit of a language that cannot be further divided (e.g., "in," "come," "-ing," forming "incoming").
2. A morphological element considered with respect to its functional relations in a linguistic system. |
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| "A morpheme can be a word or a part of a word." | "The letter 's' is a morpheme that can be added to a noun to make it plural." | "The linguistics class dedicated two weeks to learning about the types of morphemes." |
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| French, late 19th century |
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| The word "morpheme" is specific to the field of linguistics, but it's still a useful term for anyone to know. A morpheme is a unit of a language that cannot be broken down any further — it could be compared loosely to a syllable within a word. ... | |
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