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Last updated 12:58 PM on 1/22/26
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60 Terms

1
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true

By means of the operation called vowel mutation we can inflect the noun tooth.

2
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true

Compound nouns can be clipped in English.

3
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false

Each sentence contains the same number of lexemes and word-forms.

4
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true

English does not have genuine infixes

5
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true

Words are continuous sequences of morphemes.

6
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true

We and us are unrelated morphologically.

7
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true

Man-compounds do have feminine equivalents.

8
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true

Inflectional prefixes are more rare than suffixes in English.

9
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false

The form redden is derived from a verb.

10
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true

The word-form can be morphologically compositional.

11
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true

Zero derivation produces verbs from nouns

12
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true

House (n.) and house (v.) are an example of partial conversion.

13
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true

The relationship between deer (sing.) and deer (pl.) can be explained in terms of zero morpheme.

14
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false

Andy is an example of mixed clipping.

15
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false

Sail boat and scarecrow exemplify the group of endocentric compounds in English.

16
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false

The positive form goed is suppleted by the form went.

17
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false

The morpheme -ter in laughter can be treated as a cranberry morpheme.

18
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true

The words pressure, seizure and exposure represent a no longer productive word-formation process in English.

19
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true

A phonological word is a form defined in terms of phonological criteria.

20
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false

The Past Tense morpheme in English is represented in context by only one allomorph.

21
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true

Spaciousness is a well-formed word in English.

22
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true

Conversion may also involve a functional change within one word-class, as in bread (uncountable) and bread (countable).

23
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false

The English language does not have any morphological means to show the gender of noun.

24
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false

Acronymy is a concatenative word-formation process.

25
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true

Adverbs and adjectives in English may be morphologically identical.

26
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false

Affixes cannot manifest polysemantic features.

27
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false

Allomorphs are realizations of lexemes.

28
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true

English inflection is suffixal in nature.

29
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true

In analytical languages there is no or little inflection

30
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false

In English compounds bases have to be simple.

31
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false

Derivation is normally predictable semantically (regular semantically).

32
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false

The superlative is the basic form of the English adjective.

33
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true

The word-forms dobry/lepszy are examples of suppletion.

34
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true

Certain etymologically complex lexemes may be perceived as monomorphemic from the contemporary point of view.

35
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false

In dvandva compounds one base contributes more meaning to the whole lexeme.

36
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false

People have no intuition concerning the concept of word

37
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false

We can always assign meanings to derivational morphemes in a systematic way

38
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true

Some inflectional endings are fusional in nature as they combine different functions in one morphological form

39
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false

In English a word can only consist of up to four morphemes

40
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false

A compound word consists by definition of bound roots

41
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false

No morpho-syntactic word form is dependent on the grammatical context

42
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false

Amongst English nouns all their inflected forms are regular

43
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true

Inflection in English operates also within closed classes

44
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false

Synonyms are forms of the same lexeme

45
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false

Compound-complex words cannot take inflectional suffixes in English

46
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false

The suffix -ly is the only adverb forming suffix in English

47
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false

A syllable is a morphological division of a word in English

48
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true

Compound words in English are usually stressed on their first

element

49
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false

Spelling is a fool-proof criterion in the identification of compounds

50
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false

The suffix -er in English always forms nouns referring to people

51
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true

Allomorphs of one morpheme do not have to be phonologically identical

52
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true

Multiword expressions, such as idioms, can be classified as listemes

53
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true

Inflection is usually regular semantically

54
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true

Allomorphs can be phonetically, lexically and grammatically

conditioned

55
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false

Lexemes are physical units of meaning

56
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false

Morphemes always have the same length

57
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false

Morphemes are randomly occurring elements in words

58
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false

The word cranberry consists of one morpheme

59
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false

A specific affix is always applied generally to all the bases and stems of a particular kind

60
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false

A listeme is a term referring to an entry in a dictionary of a language