Derivational Affix
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A Derivational Affix is an Affix that is used in a Morphological Derivation Rule.
- Context:
- It can be:
- …
- Example(s):
- "-er", such as "teach[er]".
- "-ful", such as "thank[ful]".
- "-al", such as "region[al]".
- "-ness", such as "gentle[ness]".
- "-ment", such as "fulfill[ment]".
- See: Morphological Derivational Rule.
References
- (Loos et al., 2007) ⇒ Eugene E. Loos, Susan Anderson, Dwight H. Day Jr., Paul C. Jordan, and J. Douglas Wingate. (2007). “Glossary of Linguistic Terms." SIL International.
- http://www.sil.org/linguistics/GlossaryOfLinguisticTerms/WhatIsADerivationalAffix.htm
- A derivational affix is an affix by means of which one word is formed (derived) from another. The derived word is often of a different word class from the original.
- In contrast to an inflectional affix, a derivational affix.
1972
- R.R.K. Hartmann, and F.C. Stork. (1972). “Dictionary of Language and Linguistics. Applied Science.