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true
By means of the operation called vowel mutation we can inflect the noun tooth.
true
Compound nouns can be clipped in English.
false
Each sentence contains the same number of lexemes and word-forms.
true
English does not have genuine infixes
true
Words are continuous sequences of morphemes.
true
We and us are unrelated morphologically.
true
Man-compounds do have feminine equivalents.
true
Inflectional prefixes are more rare than suffixes in English.
false
The form redden is derived from a verb.
true
The word-form can be morphologically compositional.
true
Zero derivation produces verbs from nouns
true
House (n.) and house (v.) are an example of partial conversion.
true
The relationship between deer (sing.) and deer (pl.) can be explained in terms of zero morpheme.
false
Andy is an example of mixed clipping.
false
Sail boat and scarecrow exemplify the group of endocentric compounds in English.
false
The positive form goed is suppleted by the form went.
false
The morpheme -ter in laughter can be treated as a cranberry morpheme.
true
The words pressure, seizure and exposure represent a no longer productive word-formation process in English.
true
A phonological word is a form defined in terms of phonological criteria.
false
The Past Tense morpheme in English is represented in context by only one allomorph.
true
Spaciousness is a well-formed word in English.
true
Conversion may also involve a functional change within one word-class, as in bread (uncountable) and bread (countable).
false
The English language does not have any morphological means to show the gender of noun.
false
Acronymy is a concatenative word-formation process.
true
Adverbs and adjectives in English may be morphologically identical.
false
Affixes cannot manifest polysemantic features.
false
Allomorphs are realizations of lexemes.
true
English inflection is suffixal in nature.
true
In analytical languages there is no or little inflection
false
In English compounds bases have to be simple.
false
Derivation is normally predictable semantically (regular semantically).
false
The superlative is the basic form of the English adjective.
true
The word-forms dobry/lepszy are examples of suppletion.
true
Certain etymologically complex lexemes may be perceived as monomorphemic from the contemporary point of view.
false
In dvandva compounds one base contributes more meaning to the whole lexeme.
false
People have no intuition concerning the concept of word
false
We can always assign meanings to derivational morphemes in a systematic way
true
Some inflectional endings are fusional in nature as they combine different functions in one morphological form
false
In English a word can only consist of up to four morphemes
false
A compound word consists by definition of bound roots
false
No morpho-syntactic word form is dependent on the grammatical context
false
Amongst English nouns all their inflected forms are regular
true
Inflection in English operates also within closed classes
false
Synonyms are forms of the same lexeme
false
Compound-complex words cannot take inflectional suffixes in English
false
The suffix -ly is the only adverb forming suffix in English
false
A syllable is a morphological division of a word in English
true
Compound words in English are usually stressed on their first
element
false
Spelling is a fool-proof criterion in the identification of compounds
false
The suffix -er in English always forms nouns referring to people
true
Allomorphs of one morpheme do not have to be phonologically identical
true
Multiword expressions, such as idioms, can be classified as listemes
true
Inflection is usually regular semantically
true
Allomorphs can be phonetically, lexically and grammatically
conditioned
false
Lexemes are physical units of meaning
false
Morphemes always have the same length
false
Morphemes are randomly occurring elements in words
false
The word cranberry consists of one morpheme
false
A specific affix is always applied generally to all the bases and stems of a particular kind
false
A listeme is a term referring to an entry in a dictionary of a language