Back to Search Start Over

Nasalization [N-] In Indonesian: Generative Morphology Perspective

Authors :
Hidayat, Ramli
Sukri, Sukri
Burhanuddin, Burhanuddin
Hidayat, Ramli
Sukri, Sukri
Burhanuddin, Burhanuddin
Source :
Path of Science; Vol 9, No 4 (2023); 4001-4009; Traektoriâ Nauki; Vol 9, No 4 (2023); 4001-4009; Traektoriâ Nauki; Vol 9, No 4 (2023); 4001-4009; 2413-9009
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

This study describes the formation of Indonesian words based on generative morphology theory. Data sourced from oral and written data. The data collection method used is the documentation and observation methods, while the data analysis method uses the distributional and matching methods. The results of data analysis are presented using informal methods. The results of this study indicate that the affixes that form verbs consist of {meN-], {-an}, {ber-}, {ter-}, {meN-kan}, and {meN-i}. The meaning of these affixes is 'activities concerned with'; 'process'; 'each other'; 'to be in a state'; 'own'; 'can be in'; 'already in'; 'causative'; 'resultative'; 'intensive; and 'continuative'. The noun-forming affixes consist of {se-}, {-in}, {-at}, {pen-an}, {ke-an}, and {per-an} affixes. The meaning conveyed by these affixes is 'equal'; 'The same'; 'in a state of'; 'plural (feminine) actors'; 'plural (masculine) actors'; 'method'; and 'hal'. Adjective-forming affixes consist of affixes {-i}, {-iah}, {-ah}, and {wi-}. The meaning generated by these affixes is 'related to'; 'frequency'; 'tool'; and the 'perpetrator'. In terms of morphological typology, in general, Indonesian word formation is a mixed-type language because at the level of affixation and reduplication, Indonesian words are of the agglutination type and at the level of compounding, it behaves as an incorporation type language and tends to collect several lexical morphemes and combine them be a single word. The process of forming Indonesian words in terms of generative morphology consists of components: 1) a list of morphemes that contains free basic morphemes, bound basic morphemes, affixes, reduplications and compound words; 2) rules for forming words that process all the contents of the morpheme list, to produce acceptable and unacceptable forms; 3) filters in charge of attaching phonological idiosyncrasy

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Path of Science; Vol 9, No 4 (2023); 4001-4009; Traektoriâ Nauki; Vol 9, No 4 (2023); 4001-4009; Traektoriâ Nauki; Vol 9, No 4 (2023); 4001-4009; 2413-9009
Notes :
application/pdf, 2413-9009, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1379324853
Document Type :
Electronic Resource