FREE and BOUND MORPHEMES, AFFIXES - INTRODUCTION to LINGUISTICS

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Komentáře • 199

  • @moisesdavila2211
    @moisesdavila2211 Před 2 lety +6

    Fantastic teaching Trev Tutor. Congratulations. Your pedagogy is EXCELLENT.

  • @yusurzubaidi1736
    @yusurzubaidi1736 Před 3 lety +3

    You have no idea how helpful that was ❤👌

  • @CandleTora
    @CandleTora Před 3 lety +10

    You just saved me HOURS on badly edited powerpoints for this simple concept! Thank you so much!

  • @redabahlas
    @redabahlas Před 4 lety +2

    Thank you verry our virtual teacher.
    -A student from Morocco.

  • @QUEENESTHERGLAM
    @QUEENESTHERGLAM Před 4 lety +1

    Good pace. Great illustrations
    Excellent job
    Well done!!!

  • @user-kr8xe7pd9p
    @user-kr8xe7pd9p Před rokem +2

    This was so helpful. Thank you!

  • @craftchild_9151
    @craftchild_9151 Před 3 lety +2

    This is so great preparing for diachronic linguistic exam. 👍👍

  • @chirayubarge7490
    @chirayubarge7490 Před 4 lety

    Very useful for me........I am learning these things for the first time so found it very intresting

  • @simritsawhney5486
    @simritsawhney5486 Před 7 lety +29

    This has helped me so much. Thank you

  • @sn_azura
    @sn_azura Před 2 lety

    your explanation is very helpful. Thank you

  • @laniclari
    @laniclari Před měsícem

    I'm not taking any linguistics courses, but I am using your vids to give me a basic idea of how to create a language (many videos I watched on creating own language for stories had a knowledge of linguistics). Your videos are so helpful and you are a bit funny at times! If all goes well, I might take linguistics as a course :D

  • @prettypeyalimon6097
    @prettypeyalimon6097 Před 2 měsíci

    Thank you 🙏🏾 this was very informative ❤

  • @travelaround0
    @travelaround0 Před 6 lety

    Thanks man .. You r great

  • @ameencampano3674
    @ameencampano3674 Před 5 lety

    I speak both English and Tagalog. Nice! Both languages are in this lecture.

  • @Aidar77
    @Aidar77 Před 8 lety +11

    Blackened is also an adjective:) So the process is the following Adj->Verb->Adj/Verb

    • @Hobbit98LP
      @Hobbit98LP Před 6 lety +3

      at first glance i thought so too, but "blackened" is actually ambigous. it can be an adjective (like in "Blackened is the end..."), but it can also be a verb if we think about the -ed as an affix that indicates tense, making it a past verb ("the fire blackened the wall")

    • @schonmaharaj6939
      @schonmaharaj6939 Před 4 lety +3

      This is actually very common in french and English (I can’t speak for other languages) where the past participle becomes an adjective. In this case: it was blackened (v.) by fire so it is a blackened (adj.) wall. The same occurs with a good quantity of adjectives in English and french being as they are an effect/description “as a result of” an action.

    • @maike__-
      @maike__- Před 3 lety +1

      @@schonmaharaj6939 same goes for German 🙈
      But I'm glad I wasn't the only one who caught that and thought about it ☺️

  • @Kyle-td6px
    @Kyle-td6px Před 5 lety +1

    One question: how do circumfixes (in English, that would be the en- / -en in 'enlighten' or em- / -en in 'embolden') function in morphological trees, such as in the one for "enlightened"? My initial thought was that it would start with the root 'light' and then progress as [ _light_ → _light_*en* → *en*_lighten_ → _enlighten_*ed* ], but now I'm wondering if it would look more like [ _light_ → *en*_light_*en* → _enlighten_*ed* ], whereby both parts of the circumfix comprise only a single branch on the tree. Any idea as to which variant is proper? Cheers~

  • @cassie8594
    @cassie8594 Před 5 lety

    Thx so much for the videos

  • @Thomas-fy5tn
    @Thomas-fy5tn Před 7 lety

    You are a grad saver. THX

  • @ramakawulusan5858
    @ramakawulusan5858 Před 5 lety

    Thank you very much you save my grade

  • @chalikaunda3975
    @chalikaunda3975 Před 5 lety +3

    This has helped me a lot, thank you very much

  • @jasmineroseavelinosape9498

    Thank you, Sir

  • @juliat7030
    @juliat7030 Před 5 lety +4

    you said that there are no infixes in english but what about "speed-o-meter"?

  • @alihaitham8929
    @alihaitham8929 Před 7 lety

    It is a fruitful video, thank you

  • @nomaetamamo6479
    @nomaetamamo6479 Před 3 lety

    Nice video, very helphul!!

  • @Ban-Dam
    @Ban-Dam Před 8 lety +5

    Very Helpful ! thank you :)

  • @MMAli-po9gu
    @MMAli-po9gu Před 7 lety

    Many thanks

  • @yaboialfyn5438
    @yaboialfyn5438 Před 8 lety +35

    Hello, tagalog speaker here.Your example was nice, however using "bili" as your example might have not been the best choice because of the inherent letter i's in the word. The infix is actually "in" rather than "ni". Another example that would illustrate it better would be the verb "sulat" (meaning "to write") whose past tense is "sinulat". Or the verb meaning "to take" which is "kuha" whose past form is "kinuha".

    • @Trevtutor
      @Trevtutor  Před 8 lety +5

      +Jeff Bote Sometimes the data is simplified to make the process more understandable. I don't know the languages in detail myself, so I have to trust other textbook writers and linguists who provide these examples that they are accurate. So, likely this was just simplified to be a decent example explaining the process.

    • @katjathesaurus3800
      @katjathesaurus3800 Před 8 lety

      lol.. suspiciously funny. 'sulat' ... ~ thaw.. melt things as throw letters around..

    • @katjathesaurus3800
      @katjathesaurus3800 Před 8 lety

      'kuha' has lots meaning in dialect. contradictive to the suggestion it being without purpose given reason to what that so if as is. . like existence sein

    • @yaboialfyn5438
      @yaboialfyn5438 Před 8 lety +3

      I do not know what dialect you are referring to, but he specifically said Tagalog, so i responded with examples that exist in Tagalog. I know I do not speak for all Tagalog speakers out there, but since Tagalog is my L1, and I am fluent in it, I thought I might give some helpful information about it.
      Sure, there may be other dialects where "kuha" and "sulat" mean different things, but the focus on my comment was the Tagalog I knew growing up.

    • @yaboialfyn5438
      @yaboialfyn5438 Před 8 lety +1

      +Jesuit Clone 31 Yes, that is true. I am currently taking linguistics, and my professors used those as examples for English albeit being iffy about it since they are words in and of themselves. They also do not serve an inflectional (grammatical) meaning like in Tagalog, or a derivational meaning as in Cebuano. In English, those are usually only used as a way to emphasize the emotion of the speaker.

  • @molkadarragi4219
    @molkadarragi4219 Před 2 lety

    is there a video where you go more into detail over free morphemes (lexical and grammatical)?
    Like "I" and "to" and "yesterday" are they grammatical or lexical morphemes?

  • @mafazmohamed807
    @mafazmohamed807 Před 7 lety

    Thank you Sir

  • @samelangford2819
    @samelangford2819 Před 5 lety

    Thanks a lot.

  • @user-wz9cn9qu9h
    @user-wz9cn9qu9h Před 4 lety

    so clear!!!!!

  • @marysusansusan
    @marysusansusan Před 5 lety +1

    How do I get ahold of your quizzes/exercises?

  • @chelseys8182
    @chelseys8182 Před 5 lety

    thank god! god bless uuuu

  • @fatoumataceesay8007
    @fatoumataceesay8007 Před 3 měsíci

    Hello:) hope this gets answered in time. I am studying for an upcoming exam. According to the solutions of a worksheet, the morpheme {except} in the word is a free, functional. I cannot fathom why tho, because isn’t {except} a verb? Therefore shouldn’t it be free, lexical? I know it might be used as a preposition but in this case isn’t it kind of verblike?

  • @idontgiveadamn6341
    @idontgiveadamn6341 Před 9 lety

    Thank you

  • @inamullah6967
    @inamullah6967 Před 3 lety

    Mashallah Good for learning

  • @mixerwhisperer849
    @mixerwhisperer849 Před 3 lety

    hey dya have a video on bound roots? This video was very helpful so if you have a video on bound roots could you drop a link ?

  • @YippieKahYay
    @YippieKahYay Před 5 lety

    For "clueless", can it be [N > clue] [Adj > less] > [Adj >clueless]?

  • @kiarostami3210
    @kiarostami3210 Před 3 lety

    Hi there! If possible, I want you to clarify hwo the mechanism of morphology produces morphemes. Thanks in advance 🌹

  • @elkl3409
    @elkl3409 Před 8 lety

    thank you

  • @rahulkhan007
    @rahulkhan007 Před 4 lety +2

    It really helps me a lot ... Thank you so much sir 🥰🥰

  • @miraires
    @miraires Před 7 lety +45

    #BestTeacherEver

  • @kevinamoah7201
    @kevinamoah7201 Před rokem

    excellent

  • @tudo4735
    @tudo4735 Před 4 lety

    thanks a lot sir 😍😍😍😗😗

  • @prudencelee8946
    @prudencelee8946 Před 7 lety +5

    Thank you for your video! It's great! But may I know the differences between word and morpheme? Thanks.

    • @Trevtutor
      @Trevtutor  Před 7 lety +17

      morphemes are the smallest unit of meaning. Like bird, or -s meaning "plural". A word is composed of one or more morphemes.
      Sometimes words can be morphemes just as themselves, as long as they're free morphemes. But, even the definition of "word" isn't very clear itself.

    • @amanshahab1324
      @amanshahab1324 Před 3 lety

      noob

  • @MrShankarsa
    @MrShankarsa Před 5 lety

    How one can see morphology on line, is there any site...?

  • @stilllife5028
    @stilllife5028 Před 4 lety

    thank u thank u so much

  • @fitriherdi6321
    @fitriherdi6321 Před 4 lety +1

    Your materi is good. And you know, you use application kahoot and I like. Because application simple but interested

  • @samdhucsm
    @samdhucsm Před 4 lety

    Thankyou 😘

  • @wallflowers6489
    @wallflowers6489 Před 4 lety +1

    Hello! TrevTutor:)
    I am a university student learning linguistic recently ,and I personally found something hard to understnad during watching this video.
    For example
    Limit+ed>this not only can be past tence of the verb"Limit" but also be an adjective so it means that inflectional morphemes can also form a new word like a derivational morephemes.
    What do you think about it?

  • @hanzazbik
    @hanzazbik Před 6 lety

    For the preposition about, is correct to consider ab as a morpheme and out as another one? Thank you.

    • @Trevtutor
      @Trevtutor  Před 6 lety +1

      No. What would be the meaning/function of "ab"?

  • @he7150
    @he7150 Před 3 lety

    THANK YOUUUUUUUUUU!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @itsfati3703
    @itsfati3703 Před 6 lety +1

    Thank you ! That was very helpful

  • @LarissaSelinasSite
    @LarissaSelinasSite Před 6 lety

    Interesting, our professor told us that there are infixes in English e.g absofuckinglutely and self-un-loading. However, this was really helpful for my exam preparation, so thanks! :)

    • @Trevtutor
      @Trevtutor  Před 6 lety +1

      Yes, -fucking- and -bloody- and -frickin'- and -goddamn- are all infixes in English. They're different from the typical affixes that we normally encounter, though, so that's why I leave them out at the intro level.

    • @dr-malgus2892
      @dr-malgus2892 Před 6 lety

      the word must have at least 3 syllables. Other example: Ala-fucking-'bama

  • @iwilltubeyouall
    @iwilltubeyouall Před 7 lety

    Hi,
    sometimes it doesn't appear very consistent to me.
    Example:
    You check deactivate for its morphemes and come up with "de-activate", that's it.
    Then you check "blackened" like "black-en-ed", Adj->Verb->Verb...
    Wouldn't it be good to say for deactivate: "de-active-ate" or even "de-act-ive-ate", like: act(Verb)->active(Adj)->activate(Verb)->deactivate(Verb)? The "-ate" ending is quite common for "verbification"...like infiltrate, communicate...

    • @Trevtutor
      @Trevtutor  Před 7 lety +2

      The "deactivate" case illustrates a prefix. I wasn't intending on parsing the entire word for the tree.

  • @notahorse7105
    @notahorse7105 Před 3 lety

    Could blackened be an adjective? for example, the blackened paper was torn

  • @salmajaleel5800
    @salmajaleel5800 Před 5 lety +1

    in the word ( sara's) - ( this is Sara's book)
    does the ( 's ) count as a suffix as well?

  • @timothygeaughan4127
    @timothygeaughan4127 Před 2 lety

    I am just going take his word ford it (someone said bigfoot talk has a morpheme stream) on Sasquatch Chronicles.

  • @japifei
    @japifei Před 2 měsíci +1

    Does anybody knows a website that analises morphs?

  • @aira3887
    @aira3887 Před 3 lety +4

    had to watch this at 1.5x speed reviewing before finals lmao 😂

  • @nchanganimudenda518
    @nchanganimudenda518 Před 7 lety

    thanks! this was very helpful

  • @viwentozake8432
    @viwentozake8432 Před 5 lety

    Isn't "-en-" or "-n-" a Infix in Blackened ??

  • @annika6846
    @annika6846 Před 4 lety

    That was so helpful thank you!

  • @bonbonpony
    @bonbonpony Před 5 lety

    How can I tell whether the "-er" (in "fatter") morpheme is a comparative (meaning: more fat) or an ending representing the agent of an action (meaning: someone who makes things fat, a fatter)?
    (This question may seem ridiculous if you're a human, but it's not ridiculous at all when you try to program a computer to recognize morphepems and to understand human languages.)
    I see that you encountered a similar problem with the "-ing" morpheme.
    Interestingly, the word "vivid" itself is complex, when you analyze it in the context of Latin, where the "viv-" is the root, and "-id" is a suffix ;)
    As for the repeated "tt" - is there any rule that says which letters should be repeated in this way and in what circumstances? Does it have any proper name in linguistics?

  • @karamanid
    @karamanid Před 6 lety

    There are infixes in English, such as speed-o-meter, sister-in-law, now-a-days, all-o-phone etc

    • @SteveSilverActor
      @SteveSilverActor Před 4 lety

      Mehmet Alperen The word "fuck" can be used as an infix as well, such as in "fan-fucking-tastic".

  • @misticosan
    @misticosan Před 5 lety

    isn´t tempting an adjective? -ing adjectives and -ed adjectives bored , boring? For example?

  • @kholidaalmanikputriaji582

    Please tell me about the kind of free morpheme.

  • @kolandasamyp3808
    @kolandasamyp3808 Před 4 lety

    Nice.

  • @schonmaharaj6939
    @schonmaharaj6939 Před 4 lety

    Amazing video that’s I’ve found very useful in resupplementing my knowledge. The only thing I would add is that English has one very unique infix: fuckin’/fucking and is recognised by MIT (see. 24.900 Introduction to Linguistics on Open Course Ware), as in fun-fuckin’(/g)-tastic

  • @mercedes5670
    @mercedes5670 Před 2 lety

    what about the word patients as the doctor patients?

  • @mariasnowflake
    @mariasnowflake Před 7 lety

    Hello, is the '-ed' from a participle like 'watched' an inflexional bound morpheme? If not, how is clasified? Thank you :)

    • @Trevtutor
      @Trevtutor  Před 7 lety +2

      Yes. It's the past tense inflectional morpheme.

    • @mariasnowflake
      @mariasnowflake Před 7 lety

      TheTrevTutor Thank you so much for answering me. I wrote that on my exam and yesterday on the revision of the exam my linguistics teacher told me it wasn't even a morpheme. I got really confused.

    • @Trevtutor
      @Trevtutor  Před 7 lety

      It's absolutely 100% a morpheme in every linguistic theory that uses the terminology "morpheme".

    • @Trevtutor
      @Trevtutor  Před 7 lety +2

      Although, if "watched" was used as an adjective, like, "it was a widely watched movie", then it would be a derivational morpheme, not an inflectional morpheme.

    • @mariasnowflake
      @mariasnowflake Před 7 lety

      TheTrevTutor Thank you very much. Your videos are really helping understand everything better :)

  • @GemaMusicWonosobo
    @GemaMusicWonosobo Před 3 lety

    Keren kak..

  • @Maryam_123Edu
    @Maryam_123Edu Před 7 lety

    Thank you so much !

  • @oveesafarooq5015
    @oveesafarooq5015 Před 3 lety

    Why do we consider " able" a bound morpheme, though it is a free morphene?

  • @captainsupersterdestar1581

    What about 'empowering' drawing tree

  • @asoo__s7581
    @asoo__s7581 Před 4 lety +1

    Thanks so much for your help 😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍

  • @stayawayfrommrrogers
    @stayawayfrommrrogers Před 7 lety

    You said that in "judgers"
    the root word was judge but listed the three morpheme as [judge][er][s]
    Wouldn't the second morpheme be [r]?
    If they are the smallest unit of meaning, shouldn't they be non intersecting? The "judge" morphine and the "er" morpheme intersect.

    • @stayawayfrommrrogers
      @stayawayfrommrrogers Před 7 lety

      I just watched more of the video and yeah I think I'm right
      [r] is a bound morpheme

    • @rereraa6285
      @rereraa6285 Před 6 lety

      Roland Ramos is that right?how can be 😱😱😱😱😰

    • @tanjak.3869
      @tanjak.3869 Před 6 lety

      I don't know if it's still relevant for you, but I think "judg" can be combined to "judging," thus [judg][er][s] is okay. But the root is still "judge."

  • @nicfarrow
    @nicfarrow Před 6 lety +2

    But "judger?" Hmmm. Not in my Apple dictionary. Overall, though, the presentation is clear and well worth looking at.

    • @Trevtutor
      @Trevtutor  Před 6 lety +8

      Unfortunately, dictionaries don't reflect creativity and language use too well. Great for historical reference and language learning though!

    • @slapsoilvixen
      @slapsoilvixen Před 2 lety

      In the Philippines, those without a degree who enjoy judging others are referred to as judgers lol .

  • @mshappypancakes
    @mshappypancakes Před 2 lety +1

    So an affix is just... a bound morpheme? They're the same thing?

  • @milmoreful
    @milmoreful Před 8 lety

    wow! I love the tagalog example. Thanks !

  • @jamilanh402
    @jamilanh402 Před 6 lety +2

    why can t we consider act as a morpheme in the word of deactivate?

    • @danielyakubov3410
      @danielyakubov3410 Před 6 lety +1

      It is a morpheme in a comment below he broke it down into de- act -ive -ate

    • @jamilanh402
      @jamilanh402 Před 6 lety

      +Daniel Yakubov
      thnx Daniel :)

  • @tabarak2188
    @tabarak2188 Před 2 lety

    Q. What is the difference between a bound base and an affix ?:(

  • @peterschubernig2322
    @peterschubernig2322 Před 5 lety

    Isnt temp a word as well? So tempting consists of 3 morphemes doesnt it ?

    • @WeAreTheBroBos
      @WeAreTheBroBos Před 5 lety

      While temp is a word, it is not a morpheme of meaning in this case as tempt and temp have different origins. Also temp is highly informal as it is just short for temporary.

  • @nhienle9709
    @nhienle9709 Před 2 lety

    So how to identify root/base plss

  • @jsjb3468
    @jsjb3468 Před 4 lety

    I understanded

  • @ayoubrifi6716
    @ayoubrifi6716 Před 7 lety

    Can a word be formed by removing an affix from a longer word?

    • @Trevtutor
      @Trevtutor  Před 7 lety

      Yeah. That's usually called Backformation, like Orientation -> Orientate

  • @djamilaschneider4334
    @djamilaschneider4334 Před 6 lety

    Hello :) i really like your video but there actually is a word with an infix in english: speedometer. speed -> free morpheme, o->infix,meter->free morpheme. Maybe you add this to your video :)

    • @Trevtutor
      @Trevtutor  Před 6 lety +1

      That is not an infix, because "-o-" is not a morpheme. It has no meaning, whether inflectional or derivational. It could be called a "linking vowel", motivated by phonological epenthesis to join "speed" and "meter" into one word.

  • @ajko000
    @ajko000 Před 6 lety

    How many morphemes are in the word "people"? Because person has 1 morpheme and so does many correct? But if "people" means many person, how does this work?

    • @Trevtutor
      @Trevtutor  Před 6 lety +1

      "people" is one morpheme. It's a free morpheme that can't be broken up.

  • @giovanniduran9628
    @giovanniduran9628 Před 3 lety

    My MA task brought me here. I noticed one room for improvement tho in this lesson. In binili (Tagalog word) since bili is the root, the infix should be “in” not “ni”.

  • @ice.sasmitajambak4479

    Hello Sir,I wanna ask you about this:How to pronounce 'little'?

  • @lisaz9920
    @lisaz9920 Před 4 lety

    Can someone tell me the affixes plus the root of words like "illogical" or "incredibly"?
    il- ; -log- ; -ical
    il-, -logical
    il- ; -log- ; -ic ; -al ?
    thanks!

    • @Oki-kage
      @Oki-kage Před 4 lety

      Simon 123 I believe the affixes would be: il- , meaning NOT the root
      Logic - root word
      -al , being of the root
      And incredibly has:
      In-
      Credible
      -ly

  • @mahambaig7101
    @mahambaig7101 Před 6 lety

    what will be the boundmorpheme for "Unacceptable"

    • @zakariaazrir143
      @zakariaazrir143 Před 6 lety

      it would be the prefix un cause we have the free : acceptable

    • @Jotizs
      @Jotizs Před 2 lety

      @@zakariaazrir143 No, accept is the free morpheme here. -Able is a bound suffix meaning that the 'accept' is enabled, i.e. acceptable=able to be accepted.

    • @Jotizs
      @Jotizs Před 2 lety

      Two bound morphemes: un and able, one free morpheme: accept.

  • @kholidaalmanikputriaji582

    How about the word "animals?" is it free or bound? this word can stand alone as "animal" but it also have sufix s.

    • @Trevtutor
      @Trevtutor  Před rokem

      Animal is free while -s is bound. It’s a complex word.

  • @timothygeaughan4127
    @timothygeaughan4127 Před 2 lety

    How can you determine the difference between a morpheme stream and gibberish for an alien language?

    • @Trevtutor
      @Trevtutor  Před 2 lety

      You'd have to study the language first and find patterns in meaning before determining whether something has meaning or not. That's what field linguists and computational linguists are for.

  • @petersantos6395
    @petersantos6395 Před 6 lety

    How many morphemes does deactivate have?

  • @shaccooper4828
    @shaccooper4828 Před rokem

    It seems like ful would not be bound because it means full:
    beauty-full: beautiful: full of beauty
    mercy-full: merciful: full of mercy

  • @alaaeddineel-ahmer187
    @alaaeddineel-ahmer187 Před 6 lety

    Our professor said that infixes do exist in English as an example he said "abso-fucking-lutely", what do you think?

    • @Trevtutor
      @Trevtutor  Před 6 lety +1

      Yep. That's a good example of an infix in English. We can do it with some curse words, but the constraints on where we can insert it is a little too complicated at this point.

    • @alaaeddineel-ahmer187
      @alaaeddineel-ahmer187 Před 6 lety

      TheTrevTutor exactly! thank you for your feedback and for your explanation!

  • @awadhesh2270
    @awadhesh2270 Před 5 lety +1

    Define root....Is 'root' a bound morpheme? Plz reply

    • @AsmaaPurity
      @AsmaaPurity Před 5 lety

      The root is the free morpheme because it can stand alone
      Example:
      Disfunction
      We have the root or the free morpheme is : function
      The affix which is here a prefix which is also a bound morpheme is : dis
      Hope this was clear

    • @awadhesh2270
      @awadhesh2270 Před 5 lety

      @@AsmaaPurity Re+ceive = Receive ...but "ceive" can't stand alone....reply

    • @AsmaaPurity
      @AsmaaPurity Před 5 lety +1

      @@awadhesh2270 that's a special case of words that are old from other languages
      We have receive
      Deceive
      Conceive
      Perceive...etc
      I think it's just one morpheme here because a morpheme must have either of these 2 functions:
      - a grammatical function
      - a meaningful meaning
      Receive deceive etc if they're devided won't have either one of these 2 properties
      Like the world sci in science
      It s taken from an other old language so in english it cannot stand alone and it has to be attached to another to form a morpheme
      Was it clear?

    • @awadhesh2270
      @awadhesh2270 Před 5 lety

      @@AsmaaPurity great ...and thanx !!

    • @AsmaaPurity
      @AsmaaPurity Před 5 lety

      @@awadhesh2270 welcome

  • @user-bq5mp1vb2l
    @user-bq5mp1vb2l Před 7 lety

    what about lexemes 😩

  • @ziremb
    @ziremb Před 3 lety

    Why black is not a noun?