Wednesday, March 22, 2017

Root, Stem, and Bases

AKAR KATA, STEM, DAN BASIS. By. Assoc. Prof. Kadaruddin, S.Pd., M.Pd., MOS

Ba'dulu (2005:10) mengatakan bahwa akar kata, stem, dan basis adalah istilah-istilah yang digunakan dalam literatur untuk menunjukkan bagian kata yang tersisa ketika semua afiks telah dikeluarkan. 
Akar kata adalah suatu bentuk yang tidakdapat dianalisis lebih lanjut, apakah dalam kaitannya dengan morfologi derivasional maupun morfologi inflesional.
Akar kata adalah bagian suatu bentuk kata yang tersisa apabila semua afiks infleksional dan derivasional dibuang. Akar kata adalah bagian mendasar yang selalu hadir dalam suatu leksem.
http://sastrawanmha.blogspot.co.id/2014/02/teknik-menguasai-kosa-katabahasa.html menguraikan bahwa akar kata (root) akan sangat membantu memudahkan pemahaman kata bentukan serta rentensinya dalam ingatan. Sebuah kata biasanya terbentuk dari sebuah kata akar (root) ditambah satu atau lebih imbuhan. Jika imbuhan dan akar katanya sudah dikuasai, maka apapun kata yang terbentuk dapat difahami dengan mudah. Akar kata bahasa Inggris sebagian besar berasal dari bahasa latin
contoh
Facsimile: salinan yang sama persis dengan aslinya. Fact berasal dari bahasa latin 'facere' yang berarti 'to make' atau membuat. Simile berasal dari bahasa latin 'similis' yang berarti 'same atau like' artinya sama. Penggabungan kedua akar kata tersebut fact+simile menghasilkan kata facsimile dengan arti yang juga merupakan gabungan dari arti kedua kata tersebut, yaitu membuat salinan yang sama.
Anniversary: (perayaan) even tahunan.
Akar kata tersebut terdiri dari tiga yaitu anni yang berasal dari bahasa latin 'annus' yang berarti 'tahun'. vers berasal dari bahasa Latin 'verso' artinya 'giliran' dan terakhir adalah akhiran 'ary' yang artinya 'itulah' atau yang ini (that which). Jadi anniversary berarti tanggal / waktu terjadinya suatu peristiwa pada tahun-tahun sebelumnya.
Antecedent
Kata ini terdiri dari tiga bagian, yaitu awalan ante, kata ced, dan akhiran ent. ante adalah prefik yang berarti 'sebelum', ced berarti 'to go' atau pergi, dan akhiran ent berarti 'orang yang' atau 'apa yang'. Jika digabungkan antecedent berarti orang-orang yang ada sebelum kita atau dalam arti bebasnya adalah nenek moyang, apa yang (benda) yang mendahului sesuatu. Arti lain dari antecedent adalah kata atau bagian kalimat yang mendahului kata pengganti.
Dalam bentuk untouchables, misalnya, akar katanya adalah touch, yang kepadanya ditambahkan pertama-tama akhiran -able, kemudian awalan -un dan terakhir akhiran ­-s.
Berdasarkan uraian di atas, dapat disimpulkan bahwa akar kata adalah kata yang tidak dapat diurai lebih lanjut dan dapat diubah menjadi kata baru dengan menambahkan imbuhan atau akar kata yang lain.
Dalam ilmu linguistik, stem adalah bagian dari kata. Istilah ini mempunyai perbedaan makna. Dalam penggunaannya, stem adalah sebuah bentuk yang kepadanya dapat ditambahkan afiks.
Stem menjadi perhatian hanya apabila menyangkut morfologi infleksional. Stem boleh kompleks, boleh pula tidak. Stem kompleks boleh mengandung afiks derivasional, boleh pula mengandung lebih dari satu akar. afiks infleksional ditambahkan kepadanya, bukan afiks derivasional. Stem adalah bagian bentuk kata yang tersisa apabila semua afiks infleksional dibuang. dalam bentuk untuchables, misalnya, yang menjadi stemnya adalah untouchable; dalam bentuk kata touched, stemnya adalah touch, sekaligus merupakan akar katanya; dalam bentuk kata wheelchairs, yang menjadi stemnya adalah wheelchair, meskipun mengandung dua akar yaitu wheel dan chair
Basis adalah suatu bentuk yang kepadanya afiks ditambahkan, afiks apa saja. Hal ini berarti bahwa suatu akat kata atau stem dapat disebut basis, namum himpunan basis tidak dilengkapi dengan penggabungan himpunan akar dan himpunan stem; Suatu bentuk yang dapat diuraikan secara derivasional yang kepadanya afiks derivasional dapat ditambahkan disebut basis. Jadi, touchable dapat merupakan basis bagi prefiksasi untuk menghasilkan untouchable, namun dalam proses ini touchable tidak dapat disebut akar kata, karena masih dapat diuraikan dalam kaitannya dengan morfologi derivasional, juga tidak dapat disebut stem, karena bukan penambahan afiks infleksional yang menjadi masalah di sini.

Kesimpulan
Wikipedia mendefinisikan bahwa kata adalah suatu unit dari suatu bahasa yang mengandung arti dan terdiri dari satu atau lebih morfem.
Akar kata adalah suatu bentuk yang tidak dapat dianalisis lebih lanjut, apakah dalam kaitannya dengan morfologi derivasional maupun morfologi inflesional.
Akar kata adalah bagian suatu bentuk kata yang tersisa apabila semua afiks infleksional dan derivasional dibuang. Akar kata adalah bagian mendasar yang selalu hadir dalam suatu leksem.
Stem adalah bagian bentuk kata yang tersisa apabila semua afiks infleksional dibuang.
Basis adalah suatu bentuk yang kepadanya afiks ditambahkan, afiks apa saja, baik afiks infleksional maupun afiks derivasional. 

195 comments:

  1. Based on the explanation in class, what can i get is ;
    ROOT is the original form of word without any affixes. (Example : kick)

    STEM is the condition when a word has given a certain affixes but can called as STEM only if the inplectional affixes has eliminated (Example : kicking -> kick)

    BASE is a form of word that can add affixes to, whether it's derivational and inflectional. Therefore it can change the meaning or the part of speech (Example : kicker)

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  3. The explanation above that telling us about term that used in literatur to show the part of word that has left when all affixes is missed, which are root, stem, and bases.

    # ROOT = original form of word with no affixes inside.
    for the example = look, see, believe, sit.

    # STEM = form of word that has left if implectional is missed.
    for the example = playing - play, watching - watch, and kissing - kiss.

    # BASES = we can add implectional or we can add affixes that can change the meaning.
    for the example = worker
    for the explanation above that WORK is ROOT but WORKER is not ROOT and also not STEM that is none other BASES. But if we adding (s) = WORKERS into WORKER it is STEM.

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  4. This topic is very interesting but also very complicated and we consider the part of morphemes. Suffixes and affixes is the most important morphology.
    Root
    In English grammar and morphology, a root is a word or word element (in other words, a morpheme) from which other words grow, usually through the addition of prefixes and suffixes. Also called a root word.
    Examples: in each case in bold
    • Unhelpfully
    • reaction
    • receive
    • science
    Stem
    In English grammar and morphology, a stem is the form of a word before any inflectional affixes are added. In English, most stems also qualify as words.
    Examples: in each case in bold
    • Players
    • Bags
    • Divided
    Base
    The term base is commonly used by linguists to refer to any stem (or root) to which an affix is attached.
    In morphology, a base is a bigger unit to which an affix attaches or to which a morphological process applies. "I shall try to use the term root to refer to a single morpheme which bears the 'core' meaning of a word. The term stem will be reserved for that part of a word to which inflectional affixes are added, and base for that part to which any other morpheme is added (inflectional, derivational, compound). Unfortunately, this terminology isn't standardized.
    Examples: in each case in bold
    Dislike
    Rewrite
    Player

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  5. Name : Suci Maisyanti
    Nim : 15020205
    Class: B

    A root is the part of a word that cannot be changed, and when added to creates different forms of the word: "Walk" is a root, and can be changed in many ways: walking, walked, walker, walkie-talkie, sidewalk, walk-light, walks etc. You will never have a word related to walking where the "walk" part gets changed, so it is a root.
    A stem is the form of a word that inflections get added onto. Most of the time this will be the root. "Walk" is the form that all the inflections (grammar-affecting changes) gets added to, when you add ~ing to it, it turns into a progressive verb or a gerund. ~ed turns it perfect. ~s makes it a plural noun, or makes it agree with a singular subject.
    A base is any part of a word that you can add inflections to, or that you can add prefixes/suffixes that change the meaning/part of speech. So "walk" is also a base, because it can have inflections (walking) and can be turned into different words (walker is a noun). Walker is also a base, because you can modify it inflectionally (walkers is plural), and because it can have things added to derive new words (dog-walker).

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  6. Name:St.Ardianti
    Nim :15020205
    Class:B

    The root word is part of a form of the word remains when all inflectional and derivational affixes removed. The root word is the fundamental part that is always present in a leksem.
    Stem is part of the remaining forms of words when all inflectional affixes removed.
    Base is a form to which affixes are added, affix anything, either affix inflectional and derivational affixes. All bases can be said to be the root. However, root can not be. Because bases can be described but not roor.

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  7. Name: Srikandi Cut Wanipa Ibrahim
    Class : B
    Nim : 15020201

    A root is a form which is not further analysable, either in terms of derivational or inflectional morphology. It is that part of word-form that remains when all inflectional and derivational affixes have been removed. A root is the basic part always present in a lexeme.

    A stem is of concern only when dealing with inflectional morphology.
    In the form ‘untouchables’ the stem is ‘untouchable’, although in the form ‘touched’ the stem is ‘touch’; in the form ‘wheelchairs’ the stem is ‘wheelchair’, even though the stem contains two roots.

    A base is any form to which affixes of any kind can be added. This means that any root or any stem can be termed a base, but the set of bases is not exhausted by the union of the set of roots and the set of stems: a derivationally analysable form to which derivational affixes are added can only be referred to as a base. That is, ‘touchable’ can act as a base for prefixation to give ‘untouchable’, but in this process ‘touchable’ could not be referred to as a root because it is analysable in terms of derivational morphology, nor as a stem since it is not the adding of inflectional affixes which is in question.

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  8. Name : Reni
    Class : B
    Nim : 15020183

    A roots
    - some elements of the word are more central than other
    - root the central morpheme, or the key element to which
    others are added
    - root have a lexical (dictionary) meaning, but some
    have a full meaning only when joined to other
    elements.

    The stem
    - stem. what you add grammatical affixes to
    - a special kind of base
    - all stems are bases, but not all base can be stems in
    English because some lexical categories
    (e.g prepositions) don’t take grammatical affixes.

    The base
    Base whatever you can add affixes to
    - all roots are bases (but not vice verse)
    - can be a plain root ( e.g switch)
    - or more than one plain root (e.g window-seat)
    - or a root + one or more affixes (e.g. e, husband)

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  9. Name : Rima melati
    Class. : B
    Nim. :15020185

    -a root is word cannot be chaned
    -a stem is the form that all the inflections
    -a base is any part of a word that you can add inflections to

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  10. Name : burdam
    Clas : A
    ID : 15020111
    Based on your explanation in my class I can get that :
    -Root is the form that can not analyzed more.
    -Stem is the form of a word that inflections get added onto.
    -Base is any part of a word that you can add inflections to, or that you can add prefixes/suffixes that change the meaning/part of speech.
    For example :
    Punishments
    Based on word above consist of 3 morphemes:
    -punish = free morpheme
    -ment = bound morpheme
    -s = bound morpheme
    While :
    Root = punish
    Stem = punishment
    Base = punishment

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  11. Name : igo
    Class : A
    ID : 15020134

    -Root is the form that can not analyzed more.
    For example :
    Eat,swim and read
    -Stem is the form of a word that inflections get added onto.
    For example :
    Books = stem is book
    Running = stem run
    Collected = stem is collect
    -Base is any part of a word that you can add inflections to, or that you can add prefixes/suffixes that change the meaning/part of speech.
    For example :
    Cats = base is cat
    table

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  12. Name:Sasmita Wulandari
    Class:B
    Nim:15020194


    A stem is the form of a word before any inflectional affixes are added. In English, most stems also qualify as words.
    A base is the form of a word to which prefixes and suffixes can be added to create new words. For example, instruct is the base for forming instruction, instructor, and reinstruct.
    A root is a morpheme that expresses the basic meaning of a word and cannot be further divided into smaller morphemes.

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  13. Name : Ummu Umayyah
    Class : B
    NIM : 15020209

    1. ROOT
    What is the root ?? Hearing the root word certainly imagined in our minds that the roots .. But we are here to discuss not discuss the said plant. To understand it directly to the examples

    likes, dislike, disliked = like
    explanation: like is the root of likes, dislike and disliked

    That means the root of a word is original form without any additive.

    2. STEM
    Steam is a word which was given particular additive but does not change the kind words. For example, the root is a noun then steamnya should be a noun, if the root adjective then steam also adjective .Here
    example

    friend = friends (right)
    explanation: friend is the root form of the noun it stemnya also a noun that friends

    friend = user (one)
    explanation: friend is friendly whereas the noun is an adjective so dissimilar

    3. BASE
    All the root and the stem is the base but not all of the base may be the root and stem. example

    unfriendly = friend / user / unfriend
    explanation: its base bis friend, friendly or unfriend

    >>> Example of determining the root and stem of a base, for example

    Determine the root and the steam from the word untouchable !!!

    discussion:
    root = Touchable
    stem = untouchable
    reason: as both an adjective, remember it root and steam are the words of the same type.

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  14. Name : Nur Oktapiana
    Class : B
    NIM : 15020168
    ROOT
    A root is like a stem in constituting the core of the word to which other pieces attach, but the term refers only to morphologically simple units. For example, disagree is the stem of disagreement, because it is the base to which -ment attaches, but agree is the root. Taking disagree now, agree is both the stem to which dis- attaches and the root of the entire word.
    STEM
    A stem is a base unit to which another morphological piece is attached. The stem can be simple, made up of only one part, or complex, itself made up of more than one piece. Here it is best to consider consider a simple stem. Although it consists historically of more than one part, most present-day speakers would treat it as an unanalyzable form. We could also call consider the root.
    BASE
    A base is any unit whatsoever to which affixes of any kind can be added. The affixes attached to a base may be inflectional affixes selected for syntactic reasons or derivational affixes which alter the meaning or grammatical category of the base. An unadorned root like boy can be a base since it can have attached to it inflectional affixes like -s to form the plural boys or derivational affixes like -ish to tum the noun boy into the adjective boyish. In other words, all roots are bases. Bases are called stems only in the context of inflectional morphology. Example: faith, faithful, booksho.

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  15. Name : Nur Oktapiana
    Class : B
    NIM : 15020168
    ROOT
    A root is like a stem in constituting the core of the word to which other pieces attach, but the term refers only to morphologically simple units. For example, disagree is the stem of disagreement, because it is the base to which -ment attaches, but agree is the root. Taking disagree now, agree is both the stem to which dis- attaches and the root of the entire word.
    STEM
    A stem is a base unit to which another morphological piece is attached. The stem can be simple, made up of only one part, or complex, itself made up of more than one piece. Here it is best to consider consider a simple stem. Although it consists historically of more than one part, most present-day speakers would treat it as an unanalyzable form. We could also call consider the root.
    BASE
    A base is any unit whatsoever to which affixes of any kind can be added. The affixes attached to a base may be inflectional affixes selected for syntactic reasons or derivational affixes which alter the meaning or grammatical category of the base. An unadorned root like boy can be a base since it can have attached to it inflectional affixes like -s to form the plural boys or derivational affixes like -ish to tum the noun boy into the adjective boyish. In other words, all roots are bases. Bases are called stems only in the context of inflectional morphology. Example: faith, faithful, booksho.

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  16. Name=shinta rahma
    Class= c

    -A root
    Root is the part of a word that cannot be changed, and when added to creates different forms of the word:

    Example.."Walk" is a root, and can be changed in many ways: walking, walked, walker, walkie-talkie, sidewalk, walk-light, walks etc.

    Most of the time the root forms a word on its own, but sometimes they do not.
    complete, replete, expletive: these all have the root "plete", which happens to not be a word on its own.


    -A stem
    Stem is the form of a word that inflections get added onto. Most of the time this will be the root. "Walk" is the form that all the inflections (grammar-affecting changes) gets added to, when you add ~ing to it, it turns into a progressive verb or a gerund. ~ed turns it perfect. ~s makes it a plural noun, or makes it agree with a singular subject.


    -A base
    Base is any part of a word that you can add inflections to, or that you can add prefixes/suffixes that change the meaning/part of speech. So "walk" is also a base, because it can have inflections (walking) and can be turned into different words (walker is a noun). Walker is also a base, because you can modify it inflectionally (walkers is plural), and because it can have things added to derive new words (dog-walker).

    So all roots are bases because they are the smallest chunk that stays the same despite additions.

    Not all bases are roots though, because sometimes the root+inflection or root+derivation goes on to take additional changes. (Walker is a base, but the root is still walk).

    Stems are just bases when you are talking about inflectional changes (-ed, -ing, -s, etc.).

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  17. Name=shinta rahma
    Class= c

    -A root
    Root is the part of a word that cannot be changed, and when added to creates different forms of the word:

    Example.."Walk" is a root, and can be changed in many ways: walking, walked, walker, walkie-talkie, sidewalk, walk-light, walks etc.

    Most of the time the root forms a word on its own, but sometimes they do not.
    complete, replete, expletive: these all have the root "plete", which happens to not be a word on its own.


    -A stem
    Stem is the form of a word that inflections get added onto. Most of the time this will be the root. "Walk" is the form that all the inflections (grammar-affecting changes) gets added to, when you add ~ing to it, it turns into a progressive verb or a gerund. ~ed turns it perfect. ~s makes it a plural noun, or makes it agree with a singular subject.


    -A base
    Base is any part of a word that you can add inflections to, or that you can add prefixes/suffixes that change the meaning/part of speech. So "walk" is also a base, because it can have inflections (walking) and can be turned into different words (walker is a noun). Walker is also a base, because you can modify it inflectionally (walkers is plural), and because it can have things added to derive new words (dog-walker).

    So all roots are bases because they are the smallest chunk that stays the same despite additions.

    Not all bases are roots though, because sometimes the root+inflection or root+derivation goes on to take additional changes. (Walker is a base, but the root is still walk).

    Stems are just bases when you are talking about inflectional changes (-ed, -ing, -s, etc.).

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  18. * root of the word is part of the basic meaning of the word into another word formed from the word
    * stem is associated with inflection, stem consist of a simple or complex word, stem consist of two roots
    * base(basic words) associated with the inflection and delevasi

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  19. Name : Karmila.
    Nim : 15020143
    Root is the original form of a word without any additive. Example: likes,dislike,disliked like explanation: like is the the root of likes,dislike and disliked (2) STEM is a word which was given particular additive but does not change the kind words. For example,the root is a noun then steam should be a noun, if the root adjective then steam is also an adjective. Example friend - friends (right) explanation : friend is the root form of the noun it steam also a noun that friends friend - user ( one) explanation: friend is frindly where as the noun is an adjective so dissimilar ( 3 ) BASE all the root and the steam is the base but not all of the base may be the root and stem .example unfriendly = friend / user/ / unfriend explanation : its base bis friend, friendly or unfriend

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  20. Name: Nanang Irfan
    Nim : 15020162

    1. ROOT
    What is the root ?? Hearing the root word certainly imagined in our minds that the roots , But we are here to discuss not discuss the said plant. To understand it directly to the examples

    likes, dislike, disliked = like
    explanation: like is the root of likes, dislike and disliked

    That means the root of a word merupakaan original form without any additive.

    2. STEM
    Steam is a word which was given particular additive but does not change the kind words. For example, the root is a noun then steamnya should be a noun, if the root adjective then steam also adjective .Here
    example

    friend = friends (right)
    explanation: friend is the root form of the noun it stemnya also a noun that friends

    friend = user (one)
    explanation: friend is friendly whereas the noun is an adjective so dissimilar

    3. BASE
    All the root and the stem is the base but not all of the base may be the root and stem. example

    unfriendly = friend / user / unfriend
    explanation: its base bis friend, friendly or unfriend

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  21. Name : Nurul Kisti
    Class : B
    ROOT
    A root is the irreducible core of a word, with absolutely nothing else attached to it. It is the part that is always present, possibly with some modification, in the various manifestations of a lexeme. For example, walk is a root and it appears in the set of word-forms that instantiate the lexeme WALK such as walk, walks, walking and walked. The only situation where this is not true is when suppletion takes place. In that case, word-forms that represent the same morpheme do not share a common root morpheme. Thus, although both the word-forms good and better realise the lexeme GOOD, only good is phonetically similar to GOOD.
    STEM
    A stem is a base unit to which another morphological piece is attached. The stem can be simple, made up of only one part, or complex, itself made up of more than one piece. Here it is best to consider consider a simple stem. Although it consists historically of more than one part, most present-day speakers would treat it as an unanalyzable form. We could also call consider the root.
    BASE
    A base is any unit whatsoever to which affixes of any kind can be added. The affixes attached to a base may be inflectional affixes selected for syntactic reasons or derivational affixes which alter the meaning or grammatical category of the base. An unadorned root like boy can be a base since it can have attached to it inflectional affixes like -s to form the plural boys or derivational affixes like -ish to tum the noun boy into the adjective boyish. In other words, all roots are bases. Bases are called stems only in the context of inflectional morphology. Example: faith, faithful, booksho.

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  22. Dian Hidayasari
    15020115


    A root is a form which is not further analysable, either in terms of derivational or inflectional morphology. It is that part of word-form that remains when all inflectional and derivational affixes have been removed. A root is the basic part always present in a lexeme.

    A stem is of concern only when dealing with inflectional morphology.

    A base is any form to which affixes of any kind can be added. This means that any root or any stem can be termed a base, but the set of bases is not exhausted by the union of the set of roots and the set of stems: a derivationally analysable form to which derivational affixes are added can only be referred to as a base.

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  23. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  24. Name : Nursiti Fatimah
    No.Reg : 15020175
    Class : A

    I will reexplain about root,stem and base.
    a. Root is the part of a word that cannot be changed, and when added to creates different forms of the word. For example : "Walk" =>> a root,can be changed in many ways:walking, walked, walker,You will never have a word related to walking where the "walk" part gets changed,so it is a root. Untouchables : un => prefix, touch => root, able => sufix, s => sufix
    b. Stems is the form of a word that inflections get added onto. Or stems are just bases when you are talking about inflectional changes (-ed,-ing,-s, etc.). for example : Most of the time this will be the root.
    "Walk" is the form that all the inflections (grammar-affecting changes) gets added to,walk ~ing -> a progressive verb walk ~ed -> past walk ~s -> 3rd singular person.
    untouchables >>untouchable => stem touched >>touch => stem/root wheelchairs >>wheelchair => stem (two roots).
    c. Base any part of a word that you can add inflections to, or that you can add prefixes/suffixes that change the meaning/part of speech. For example : touchable => base of untouchabletouchable is not root can be analyzed by derivational affix (touch + able)touchable is not stem not add by inflectional affix“walk “ >>> different words (walker is a noun).Walkeris also a base, >>> inflectionally (walkers is plural),and because it can have things added to derive new words (dog-walker)."walk" is also a stem because it can have inflections (walking).

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  25. Name : MahdahiRany Nur
    Nim : 15020147
    Class: A

    The different of Root, stem and base

    1.Root is a word that does not have a prefix in front of the word or a suffix at the end of the word. The root word is the primary lexical unit of a word , and of a word family (root is then called base word).
    => Example :
    chatters has the inflectional root or lemma chatter , but the lexical root chat .

    2.Stem is that part of a word that is in existence before any inflectional affixes have been added. Inflection is discussed in section.

    => For example:
    Noun stem Plural
    Cat -s
    Worker -s

    3.Base is any unit whatsoever to which affixes of any kind can be added. The affixes attached to a base may be inflectional affixes selected for syntactic reasons or derivational affixes which alter the meaning or grammatical category of the base. An unadorned root like boy can be a base since it can have attached to it inflectional affixes like -s to form the plural boys or derivational affixes like -ish to tum the noun boy into the adjective boyish. In other words, all roots are bases. Bases are called stems only in the context of inflectional morphology.

    => Example :
    faith, faithful, booksho.

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  26. - Root is the part of a word that cannot be changed, and when added to creates different forms of the word.
    - Stem is the form of a word that inflections get added onto.
    - Base any part of a word that you can add inflections to, or that you can add prefixes/suffixes that change the meaning/part of speech.

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  27. Name : Khaerunnisa
    Nim : 15020144
    Class : A
    -Root is the element on which the formation of the word.
    -Stem is a morpheme, word, or phrase that joining affixes (without inflectional affixes).
    -Base is a morpheme that can be expanded with spiked affixes.

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  28. NAME : A.NURHASANA SAJINA
    NM : 1020097
    CLASS : A

    1. ROOT
    Hearing the root word certainly imagined in our minds that the roots .. But we are here to discuss not discuss the said plant. To understand it directly to the examples

    likes, dislike, disliked = like
    explanation: like is the root of likes, dislike and disliked

    That means the root of a word merupakaan original form without any additive.

    2. STEM
    Steam is a word which was given particular additive but does not change the kind words. For example, the root is a noun then steamnya should be a noun, if the root adjective then steam also adjective .Here
    example

    friend = friends (right)
    explanation: friend is the root form of the noun it stemnya also a noun that friends
    friend = user (one)
    explanation: friend is friendly whereas the noun is an adjective so dissimilar

    3. BASE
    All the root and the stem is the base but not all of the base may be the root and stem. example

    unfriendly = friend / user / unfriend
    explanation: its base bis friend, friendly or unfriend

    >>> Example of determining the root and stem of a base, for example

    Determine the root and the steam from the word untouchable !!!

    discussion:
    root = Touchable
    stem = untouchable
    reason: as both an adjective, remember it root and steam are the words of the same type.

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  31. NAME: NURAMALIA
    NIM: 15021541

    1. ROOT
    an element that becomes the basis of the formation of the original form of a word or words without any additive
    likes, dislike, disliked = like
    explanation: like is the root of likes, dislike and disliked.

    2. STEM
    Stem is a word which was given particular additive but does not change the kind words. For example, the root is a noun it is also a noun stem both should be a noun, if the root of the stem adjective also adjective .Here his example.

    friend = friends (right)
    explanation: friend is the root form of the noun it is also a noun stem are friends

    friend = user (one)
    explanation: friend is friendly whereas the noun is an adjective so dissimilar

    3. BASE
    All the root and the stem is the base but not all of the base may be the root and stem. example

    unfriendly = friend / user / unfriend
    explanation: its base can be friend, friendly or unfriend
    another example.
    said books are basically form book, and says singers its basic form is a singer, while the word itself singer basic form is sing.

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  32. Root is the part of word that cannot be change and when added to creates different forms of the word. Root is the form that cannot analyze more. Are there in derivational and inflectional term. Root all the simple word and can be morpheme and word.
    Example: Reconstructions
    Re=>prefix Construct=>Root Ion=>suffix S=>Suffix

    Stem the form of a word that inflections get added onto. Stem only about inflectional, simple or complex and consist of two roots.
    Example: Reconstructions >>
    Reconstruction=> Stem
    Base is any part of a word that you can add inflection to or that you can add prefixes/suffixes that change the meaning/part of speech.
    Example : Construction => Base of Reconstruction
    Construction => Is not root (can be analyzed by the derivational affix) construct + Ion
    Construction => Not add by inflectional affix







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  34. NAME: DWINANDA INDRIANI HUSLIN
    NIM: 15020117
    CLASS: A

    1. The root is the term to refer to form of said that can not be subdivided, can not be analyzed again, no addition of affixes again. These roots there is always, although in the form of a wide range of modification of a leksem. Example; walk, is the root, can appear in the form of forms of said, such as: walks, walking, walked. tenses represent the morpheme the same is not necessarily have the root of morphemes the same.
    2. Stem is part of said before the given additional affixes inflectional. See example; Base plural noun Cat- s Worker- s form of said cats, suffixes infleksinonal added to the base( stem) paint, which is also the root( root). In the form of said workers, suffixes inflectional ( marker plural) was added to the worker. Worker is the stem( the base), while the work is the root.
    3. Base is a form of the basis in the process of morphology, where affixes can be added; good affixes inflectional and derivational. In other words that all the root( root) is also base( basic form). Identification of the root, base, stem, and affix the following.

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  35. Name : Muafidah.
    Class : A
    1.Root is the original form of a word without any additive.
    Examples like, likes, dislike, dialiked = like
    Explanation: like is the root of likes and disliked Dislike.
    2. STEM
    Steam is a word which was given particular additive but does not change the kind words. For example, the root is a noun then steamnya should be a noun, if the root adjective then steam also adjective .Here
    example:
    friend = friends (right)
    explanation: friend is the root form of the noun it stemnya also a noun that friendsfriend = user (one)
    explanation: friend is friendly whereas the noun is an adjective so dissimilar
    3. BASE
    All the root and the stem is the base but not all of the base may be the root and stem. example:
    unfriendly = friend / user / unfriend
    explanation: its base bis friend, friendly or unfriend.

    ReplyDelete
  36. Name : Muafidah.
    Class : A
    1.Root is the original form of a word without any additive.
    Examples like, likes, dislike, dialiked = like
    Explanation: like is the root of likes and disliked Dislike.
    2. STEM
    Steam is a word which was given particular additive but does not change the kind words. For example, the root is a noun then steamnya should be a noun, if the root adjective then steam also adjective .Here
    example:
    friend = friends (right)
    explanation: friend is the root form of the noun it stemnya also a noun that friendsfriend = user (one)
    explanation: friend is friendly whereas the noun is an adjective so dissimilar
    3. BASE
    All the root and the stem is the base but not all of the base may be the root and stem. example:
    unfriendly = friend / user / unfriend
    explanation: its base bis friend, friendly or unfriend.

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  37. 1. A root is a form which is not further analysable, either in terms of derivational or inflectional morphology. It is that part of word-form that remains when all inflectional and derivational affixes have been removed. A root is the basic part always present in a lexeme. In the form ‘untouchables’ the root is ‘touch’, to which first the suffix ‘-able’, then the prefix ‘un-‘ and finally the suffix ‘-s’ have been added. In a compound word like ‘wheelchair’ there are two roots, ‘wheel’ and ‘chair’

    2. A stem is of concern only when dealing with inflectional morphology.
    In the form ‘untouchables’ the stem is ‘untouchable’, although in the form ‘touched’ the stem is ‘touch’; in the form ‘wheelchairs’ the stem is ‘wheelchair’, even though the stem contains two roots.

    3. A base is any form to which affixes of any kind can be added. This means that any root or any stem can be termed a base, but the set of bases is not exhausted by the union of the set of roots and the set of stems: a derivationally analysable form to which derivational affixes are added can only be referred to as a base. That is, ‘touchable’ can act as a base for prefixation to give ‘untouchable’, but in this process ‘touchable’ could not be referred to as a root because it is analysable in terms of derivational morphology, nor as a stem since it is not the adding of inflectional affixes which is in question.

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  38. NAMA :RAHARTI
    NIM :15020180
    CLASS: B

    I think root is the irreducible core of a word,with absolutely nothing else attached to it.roots can be free morpheme or a word element which the other new words grow,usually through addition prefixes and suffixes.
    Example :unhappy,root:happy.

    Stem is the form of a word that inflections get added.most of the time this will be the root."walk"is the form that all the inflections(grammar-affecting changes)get added to,when you add-ing to it.it turns into progressive verb or a gerund.
    Inflections suffixes:
    1.-s(plural)
    2.-s(possessive)
    3.-s(third singular person)
    4.-ed(past tense)
    5.-en(past participle)
    6.-ing(present participle)
    7.-er(comparative)
    8.-es(superlative)

    Base is any part of a word that you can add inflections to,or that you can add prefixes/suffixes that change the meaning/part of speech.so 'walk'is also a base,because it can have inflections(walking)and can be turned into different words(walkes is noun).walker is also a base,because you can modify itinflectionally(walkers is plural),and because it can have things added to derive new words(dog-walker).
    Example:like(root)+-dis=dislike(base)+-(inflectional suffixes)= dislike(steam)it means that steam'dislike'come from base'dislike'.

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  39. Nurdania
    15020170
    Root, stem, base
    Taken from: Bauer, Laurie (1983:20-21): English word-formation. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 

    ‘Root’, ‘stem’ and ‘base’ are all terms used in the literature to designate that part of a word that remains when all affixes have been removed.

    A root is a form which is not further analysable, either in terms of derivational or inflectional morphology. It is that part of word-form that remains when all inflectional and derivational affixes have been removed. A root is the basic part always present in a lexeme. In the form ‘untouchables’ the root is ‘touch’, to which first the suffix ‘-able’, then the prefix ‘un-‘ and finally the suffix ‘-s’ have been added. In a compound word like ‘wheelchair’ there are two roots, ‘wheel’ and ‘chair’.

    A stem is of concern only when dealing with inflectional morphology.
    In the form ‘untouchables’ the stem is ‘untouchable’, although in the form ‘touched’ the stem is ‘touch’; in the form ‘wheelchairs’ the stem is ‘wheelchair’, even though the stem contains two roots.

    A base is any form to which affixes of any kind can be added. This means that any root or any stem can be termed a base, but the set of bases is not exhausted by the union of the set of roots and the set of stems: a derivationally analysable form to which derivational affixes are added can only be referred to as a base. That is, ‘touchable’ can act as a base for prefixation to give ‘untouchable’, but in this process ‘touchable’ could not be referred to as a root because it is analysable in terms of derivational morphology, nor as a stem since it is not the adding of inflectional affixes which is in question.

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  40. ROPOT ERIANTO
    15020190

    ROOT

    Root is the smallest meaning part of a word
    Example: dis[like] and dis[like]d, like is the root of dislike and disliked

    STEAM

    Steam is a word which was given particular additive but does not change the kind words. For example, the root is a noun then steamnya should be a noun, if the root adjective then steam also adjective .Here
    example

    friend = friends (right)
    explanation: friend is the root form of the noun it stemnya also a noun that friends

    friend = user (one)
    explanation: friend is friendly whereas the noun is an adjective so dissimilar

    BASE

    All the root and the stem is the base but not all of the base may be the root and stem. example

    unfriendly = friend / user / unfriend
    explanation: its base bis friend, friendly or unfriend

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  41. According to Bauer, L. (1983) . English word-formation. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press

    A root is a form which is not further analysable, either in terms of derivational or inflectional morphology. It is that part of word-form that remains when all inflectional and derivational affixes have been removed. A root is the basic part always present in a lexeme. In the form ‘untouchables’ the root is ‘touch’, to which first the suffix ‘-able’, then the prefix ‘un-‘ and finally the suffix ‘-s’ have been added.

    A stem is of concern only when dealing with inflectional morphology.
    In the form ‘untouchables’ the stem is ‘untouchable’, although in the form ‘touched’ the stem is ‘touch

    A base is any part of a word that you can add inflections to, or that you can add prefixes/suffixes that change the meaning/part of speech. So "walk" is also a base, because it can have inflections (walking) and can be turned into different words (walker is a noun). Walker is also a base, because you can modify it inflectionally (walkers is plural), and because it can have things added to derive new words (dog-walker).

    So all roots are bases because they are the smallest chunk that stays the same despite additions.

    Not all bases are roots though, because sometimes the root+inflection or root+derivation goes on to take additional changes. (Walker is a base, but the root is stillwalk).
    Stems are just bases when you are talking about inflectional changes (-ed, -ing, -s, etc.).


    Taken from: galghamdi & John Kerpan

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  42. Name : Nur Rezki Amalia
    NIM : 15020169
    Class : B
    Based on the explanation in the class I can get knowledge, that :
    Root is a form that can not be analyzed further, whether in terms of derivational or inflectional and also can be root if the derivational and inflectional has been eliminated.
    Example : predictable =>predict + able => predict (root)
    from the example we can see : predictable word without able namely root.
    Stem is about changing inflectional (eg : -s , -es. –ed, etc) and can be stem if the inflectional has been eliminated, usually consist of two roots in a simple or complex word.
    Example : living rooms => living room =>(stem) living + room (two roots)
    from the example we can see living rooms when inflectional –s has been eliminated the word be stem and also consist of two roots is living word and room word. In addition, we can know that sometimes stem can also be root.
    Base is any part of a word that you can add inflections to or that you can add prefixes/suffixes that change the meaning/part of speech.
    Example: ’walk’ is also base, because it can have inflections (walking) and can be turned into different words(walker is a noun).Walker is also a base, bacause you can modify inflectionally, all roots are bases and not all bases are roots (eg: walker is base and the root is walk)

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  43. Name : Yulinar Nurul M.W.
    Stambuk : 15020217

    ➖ Root is part of the words related to the form of derivational and inflectional. Root can be changed and analyze more.
    ➖ Stem is part of the words related to form of inflection. Stem can be complex word and consists of two roots.
    ➖ Bases are part of the words related to the form of inflections and can add prefixes or suffixes. Not all bases can be a root, but root can be bases and stem.

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  44. Name : Nur Violeta Thamrin
    NO.reg : 15020178
    Class : B
    Hello,
    I will give you all a simple explanation of root,stem and base .
    ●Roots are words that create base for any word that has a meaning with no suffix or prefix. Basically these words create origin for the word that help in defining. Root words have their own meaning, idea or concept. Root words are already small in size having meaning and these cannot be further reduced.
    Example;
    Geology - Geo is the root word
    Capture - Cap is the root word
    ●Stems are words that is used for joining words.
    Example;Photosynthesis - syn is the stem word
    ●BASE Words are a words that can stand alone.
    Example; from worker word - base of worker is work .

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  45. NAME:SALMA SAPUTRI.A
    NIM:15020193

    1. Root is the irreducible core of a word, with absolutely nothing else attached to it. Roots can be free morpheme or a word element which the other new words grow, usually through addition prefixes and suffixes.
    Example : unhappy, root : happy.
    2. Steam is a word element to which grammatical or inflectional suffixes can be added. Every word that end with inflectional suffixes, we called it ‘steam’.
    Example :
    Bag (root) – bag(s) = bags (steam)
    Play (root) – play(er)(base)+(s) = players (steam)
    3.Base I any unit to which affixes of any kind derivational/lexical affixes can be added. All roots are bases. Bases are called steams only in the context of inflectional morphology.
    Example :
    Like (root) + -dis = dislike(base)+ -ed (inflectional suffixes) = disliked( steam)
    It means that stem ‘disliked’ come from base ‘dislike’

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  46. Name : Musdalifah septiberliana
    class : B
    nim : 15020159

    Based on the explanation in class, what can i get is ;
    Its simple explanation to understanding the material
    Root stem and base
    #Root
    Root is the part of a word that cannot be changed, and when added to creates different forms of the word, and the part of word that still exist after all derivational and inflectional afixes is deleted
    For Example = Walk" =>> a root,
    can be changed in many ways:
    walking, walked, walker,
    walkie-talkie, sidewalk,
    walk-light, walks etc.
    You will never have a word related to walking where
    the "walk" part gets changed,
    so it is a root.
    #Stem
    stem > only about inflectional
    stem > simple or complex
    stem > consist of two roots
    Example =
    untouchables >>
    untouchable => stem
    #Base
    any part of a word that you can add inflections to, or that you can add prefixes/suffixes that change the meaning/part of speech
    Example = touchable => base of untouchable
    So allroots are bases but not all bases are roots

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  47. name : Sunartika
    NIM : 15020207

    A root is a form which is not further analysable, either in terms of derivational or inflectional morphology. It is that part of word-form that remains when all inflectional and derivational affixes have been removed. A root is the basic part always present in a lexeme. In the form ‘untouchables’ the root is ‘touch’, to which first the suffix ‘-able’, then the prefix ‘un-‘ and finally the suffix ‘-s’ have been added. In a compound word like ‘wheelchair’ there are two roots, ‘wheel’ and ‘chair’.

    A stem is of concern only when dealing with inflectional morphology.
    In the form ‘untouchables’ the stem is ‘untouchable’, although in the form ‘touched’ the stem is ‘touch’; in the form ‘wheelchairs’ the stem is ‘wheelchair’, even though the stem contains two roots.

    A base is any form to which affixes of any kind can be added. This means that any root or any stem can be termed a base, but the set of bases is not exhausted by the union of the set of roots and the set of stems.

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  48. NAMA:SATRIANI
    NIM:15020195

    1.roots is the core of the word. It is the morpheme that comprises the most important part of the word.

    2.Stem is the form of a word that inflections get added onto. most of the time this will be the root.
    3.Base is any part of a word that you can add inflection to, or that you can add prefixes/suffixes that change the meaning/part of speech

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  49. NAME:RATI FEBRIANI
    NIM:15020181

    1. Root is the irreducible core of a word, with absolutely nothing else attached to it. Roots can be free morpheme or a word element which the other new words grow, usually through addition prefixes and suffixes.
    Example : unhappy, root : happy.
    2. Steam is a word element to which grammatical or inflectional suffixes can be added. Every word that end with inflectional suffixes, we called it ‘steam’.
    Example :
    Bag (root) – bag(s) = bags (steam)
    Play (root) – play(er)(base)+(s) = players (steam)
    3.Base I any unit to which affixes of any kind derivational/lexical affixes can be added. All roots are bases. Bases are called steams only in the context of inflectional morphology.
    Example :
    Like (root) + -dis = dislike(base)+ -ed (inflectional suffixes) = disliked( steam)
    It means that stem ‘disliked’ come from base ‘dislike’

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  50. Name : Nurlinda
    Nim : 15020174
    Class. : B

    1. ROOT is the part of a word that cannot be changed, and when added to creates different forms of the word.
    for example : " walk ">> a root, can be changed in many ways : walking, walked, and walker.

    2. STEM is a sentence that gives a certain diversity, but not change the words of the wise man. for example, the root is a noun then stem should be a noun or can also in connect in a sentence. if the root of being adjective then stem in changed in the form of the sentence then stem can be set to be noun.
    fir example : Noun stem Cat-s and worker-s

    3. BASES we can add implectional or we can add affixes that can change the meaning. for the example = worker for the explanation above that "WORK" is "ROOT" but "WORKER" is not ROOT and alsonot STEM that is none other BASES. Butif we adding (s) = WORKERS into WORKER it is STEM.

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  51. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  52. NAME:YUSNIDA
    NIM:15020218

    1.Root is a form which is not further analysable, either in terms of derivational or inflectional morphology. It is that part of word-form that remains when all inflectional and derivational affixes have been removed. A root is the basic part always present in a lexeme. In the form ‘untouchables’ the root is ‘touch’, to which first the suffix ‘-able’, then the prefix ‘un-‘ and finally the suffix ‘-s’ have been added. In a compound word like ‘wheelchair’ there are two roots, ‘wheel’ and ‘chair’.

    2.Stem is of concern only when dealing with inflectional morphology.
    In the form ‘untouchables’ the stem is ‘untouchable’, although in the form ‘touched’ the stem is ‘touch’; in the form ‘wheelchairs’ the stem is ‘wheelchair’, even though the stem contains two roots.

    3.Base is any form to which affixes of any kind can be added. This means that any root or any stem can be termed a base, but the set of bases is not exhausted by the union of the set of roots and the set of stems: a derivationally analysable form to which derivational affixes are added can only be referred to as a base. That is, ‘touchable’ can act as a base for prefixation to give ‘untouchable’, but in this process ‘touchable’ could not be referred to as a root because it is analysable in terms of derivational morphology, nor as a stem since it is not the adding of inflectional affixes which is in question.

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  53. NUR ASIZAH
    15020165

    Root

    Root is a form which is not further analysable, either in terms of derivational or inflectional morphology. It is that part of word-form that remains when all inflectional and derivational affixes have been removed.

    Stem

    Stem is of concern only when dealing with inflectional morphology.
    In the form ‘untouchables’ the stem is ‘untouchable’, although in the form ‘touched’ the stem is ‘touch’; in the form ‘wheelchairs’ the stem is ‘wheelchair’, even though the stem contains two roots.

    Base

    Base is any form to which affixes of any kind can be added. This means that any root or any stem can be termed a base, but the set of bases is not exhausted by the union of the set of roots and the set of stems: a derivationally analysable form to which derivational affixes are added can only be referred to as a base.

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  54. Name : Jolanda
    Nim : 15020142
    1. Root.
    A root is the part of word that cannot be changed, and when added to creates different forms of the word.
    2. Stem.
    A stem is the form of a word that inflections get added onto. Most of the time this will be the root.
    3. Base.
    A base is any part of a word that you can add inflections to, or that you can add prefixes/suffixes that change the meaning/part of speed

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  56. Nama : Nurhayati
    NIM : 15020173
    Class : B
    Root is word without affix (suffix and prefix). Root can be free morpheme. Complex word can’t be root, but simple word can be root if the affix is cleared.
    For example: Unbelievable
    -un berupa prefix
    -believe bereupa root/free morpheme
    Able berupa free morpheme
    We say that’s root if cleared the affix of the word.
    Stem is the word that inflections get added onto. You can say it is stem when you’re talking about inflectional changes.
    Character of stem:
    • Only about inflectional
    • Simple or complex
    • Consist of two roots or more
    Example: “smartest”
    ‘Smart’ is a stem. Will be stem if we delete the “est “ (Inflectional).
    The different between root and stem:
    - Root consist of one word, but stem can more than one
    - Consist of derivation and inflection, but stem only consist of inflection.
    Base is any part of the word that you can add inflection to, or that you can add affixes that changes the meaning.
    Example:
    1. Speaker is a base, inflectionally.
    2. Touchable is base of untouchable.

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  57. Name :Musnaeny
    Class:B
    Nim :15020160

    Based on the explanation in class, and i can get is of root, steem, and base.

    #Root
    Root is a form which is not furthe analysable, either in term of derivational morphologhy, it that part of word-from that remains when all inflectional and derivational affixes have been removed.

    #Stem
    Stem is a word which was given particular additive but does not change the kind words. For example, the root is a noun then Steam should be a noun, if the root acdjective then Steam also adjective.

    #Base

    A base is any part of a word that you cand add inflection to, or that you can add prefixes/suffixes that change the meaning or part of speech. So "walk" is also a base, because it can have inflections (walking) and can be turned into different words (walker is a noun). Walker is also base, because you can modify it inflectionally (Walkers is plural). And because it can have things added to drive new words (dog-walker)

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  58. name:miftahul jannah
    nim :15020198
    name:miftahul jannah
    nim :15020149
    1. ROOT
    Hearing the root word certainly imagined in our minds that the roots .. But we are here to discuss not discuss the said plant. To understand it directly to the examples

    likes, dislike, disliked = like
    explanation: like is the root of likes, dislike and disliked

    That means the root of a word merupakaan original form without any additive.
    2. Steam is a word element to which grammatical or inflectional suffixes can be added. Every word that end with inflectional suffixes, we called it ‘steam’.
    Example :
    Bag (root) – bag(s) = bags (steam)
    Play (root) – play(er)(base)+(s) = players (steam)
    3. BASE
    All the root and the stem is the base but not all of the base may be the root and stem. example:
    unfriendly = friend / user / unfriend
    explanation: its base bis friend, friendly or unfriend.

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  59. Name :Musnaeny
    Class:B
    Nim :15020160

    Based on the explanation in class, and i can get is of root, steem, and base.

    #Root
    Root is a form which is not furthe analysable, either in term of derivational morphologhy, it that part of word-from that remains when all inflectional and derivational affixes have been removed.

    #Stem
    Stem is a word which was given particular additive but does not change the kind words. For example, the root is a noun then Steam should be a noun, if the root acdjective then Steam also adjective.

    #Base

    A base is any part of a word that you cand add inflection to, or that you can add prefixes/suffixes that change the meaning or part of speech. So "walk" is also a base, because it can have inflections (walking) and can be turned into different words (walker is a noun). Walker is also base, because you can modify it inflectionally (Walkers is plural). And because it can have things added to drive new words (dog-walker)

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  60. St.Nurfadillah
    15020199
    B class


    According to Bauer,L. (1983).

    Root
    A root is a form which is not further analysable, either in terms of derivational or inflectional morphology. It is that part of word-form that remains when all inflectional and derivational affixes have been removed. A root is the basic part always present in a lexeme. In the form ‘untouchables’ the root is ‘touch’, to which first the suffix ‘-able’, then the prefix ‘un-‘ and finally the suffix ‘-s’ have been added. In a compound word like ‘wheelchair’ there are two roots, ‘wheel’ and ‘chair’.

    Stem

    A stem is of concern only when dealing with inflectional morphology.
    In the form ‘untouchables’ the stem is ‘untouchable’, although in the form ‘touched’ the stem is ‘touch’; in the form ‘wheelchairs’ the stem is ‘wheelchair’, even though the stem contains two roots.

    Base

    A base is any form to which affixes of any kind can be added. This means that any root or any stem can be termed a base, but the set of bases is not exhausted by the union of the set of roots and the set of stems: a derivationally analysable form to which derivational affixes are added can only be referred to as a base. That is, ‘touchable’ can act as a base for prefixation to give ‘untouchable’, but in this process ‘touchable’ could not be referred to as a root because it is analysable in terms of derivational morphology, nor as a stem since it is not the adding of inflectional affixes which is in question.

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  61. Indriyana Ekasarah
    15020138/A
    1.Root used to refer to a form that can not be analyzed further. That is the root of it is the shape that remains after all afiksnya both inflectional affixes and derivasionalnya eliminated (Chaer, 2007: 160).
     
    2.Stem
    Stem is part of the remaining forms of words when all inflectional affixes removed. Meanwhile Chaer (2007: 160) states that the term stem is used to refer to the basic shape in the process of affixing the inflection or inflectional affixes
    3. BASE
    All the root and the stem is the base but not all of the base may be the root and stem. example

    unfriendly = friend / user / unfriend
    explanation: its base bis friend, friendly or unfriend

    >>> Example of determining the root and stem of a base, for example

    Determine the root and the steam from the word untouchable !!!

    discussion:
    root = Touchable
    stem = untouchable
    reason: as both an adjective, remember it root and steam are the words of the same type.

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  62. Nama : Irmah
    NIM : 15020140
    Class : B
    Root is the irreducible core of a word,with absolutely nothing else attached to it.roots can be free morpheme or a word element which the other new words grow,usually through addition prefixes and suffixes.
    Example :unhappy,root:happy.
    stem is the form of a word that inflections get added onto. Most of the time this will be the root. For example, the root is a noun then Steam should be a noun, if the root acdjective then Steam also adjective
    base is any form to which affixes of any kind can be added. This means that any root or any stem can be termed a base, but the set of bases is not exhausted by the union of the set of roots and the set of stems: a derivationally analysable form to which derivational affixes are added can only be referred to as a base.

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  63. - Root is the irreducible core of a
    word, with absolutely nothing else attached to it. Roots can be
    free morpheme or a word element which the other new
    words grow, usually through
    addition prefixes and suffixes.
    - Steam
    Steam is a word element to
    which grammatical or inflectional
    suffixes can be added. Every
    word that end with inflectional
    suffixes, we called it ‘steam’.
    Inflectional suffixes.
    2. Base
    Base I any unit to which affixes
    of any kind derivational/lexical
    affixes can be added. All roots
    are bases. Bases are called
    steams only in the context of
    inflectional morphology.

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  64. Name : R I S D A
    Nim : 15020187
    Class : IV B

    - Root is the part of a word that cannot be changed, and when added to creates different form of the word :
    “ walk”, is a root, and can be changed in many ways : walking, walked, walker, walkie-talkie, sidewalk, walk-light, walks etc. You will never have a word related to walking where the “walk” part gets changed, so it is a root.

    - Stem is the form of a word that inflection get added on to. Most of the time this will be the root. “walk” is the form that all the inflection (grammar-affecting changes) get added to, when you add-ing to it, it turns into a progressive verb or a gerund-ed turns it perfect. –s makes it a plural noun, or makes it agree with a singular subject.

    - Base is any part of a word that you can add inflection to, or that you can add prefixes/suffixes that change the meaning/part of speech. So “walk” is also base, because it can have inflection (walking) and can be turned into different word (walker is a noun). Walker is also a base, because you can modify it inflectionally (walker is plural), and because it can have things added to drive new words (dog walker).

    So all roots are bases because they are the smallest chunk that stays the same despite additions.
    Not all base are roots though, because sometimes the root + inflection or root + derivation goes on to take additional changes. (walker is the root is still walk)
    Stem are just bases when you are talking about inflectional changes (-ed, -ing, -s, etc).

    ReplyDelete
  65. - root is the term given to the
    form of words that can not be
    subdivided, can not be
    analyzed again, no additional
    recharge again. This root is
    always there, even in the form
    of a wide variety of
    modifications to a lexeme.
    -
    Stems are part of the word
    before given additional
    inflectional affixes.
    - Base is a
    form on which to base the
    morphology process, which
    affixes can be added; both
    inflectional and derivational
    affixes. In other words, all of
    the root is also the base.

    ReplyDelete
  66. NAME : MUZDALIFA LUBIS
    CLASS : IV/B
    NIM : 15020161

    According to my understanding, I can conclude that:
    -Root is the term given to the form of words that can not be subdivided, can not be analyzed again, no additional recharge again. This root is always there,even in the form of a wide variety of modifications to a lexeme. Example: Walk, is the root can appear in the form of word forms,such as: walks,walking,walked.
    -Stem is part of the word before given additional inflectional affixes. Example: Friends
    -Base are forms the basic of the morphology process,which affixes can be added: both inflectional and derivational affixes. In other words , all root is also the base. Example:Bookshop



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  67. A root is the part of a word that cannot be changed, and when added to creates different forms of the word.
    Example : Walk

    A stem is the form of a word that inflections get added onto.
    Example : Swimming = Swim is a stem

    A base is any part of a word that you can add inflections to, or that you can add prefixes/suffixes that change the meaning/part of speech.
    Example : Swimming = Swim is a base
    Swemmer = swim is a base

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  68. HERNAWATI
    15020131

    After I study in class and I look in mr blog about root,steam and base I know about that.

    root is the part of word that is the original form in which the root does not have any affixes.
    for example
    likes,dislike,disliked=like
    explanation
    like is the root from likes,dislike,and disliked

    steam is part of word that only speak up about inflection, when steam can have two roots and steam also can be simple or complex word, this is steam the given word affix spesific but not change the types of word.
    for example
    friends=friend
    explanation
    friend is steam from friends. if you want know where steam from friends you must look the inflection, and you must delete suffix it is S so friend can be steam.

    base is part of the word that can add affixes and suffixes that change.
    for example
    untouchable=touchable
    explanatio touchable is base from untouchable
    why touchable is base from untouchable because touchable can add suffixes and affixes

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  69. Name : Risqa Amaliyah
    Nim : 15020189
    I draw some conclusions about the third point, namely, root, stem and base. that where all three are studies of the morpheme.
    -root is the base of the word and can not be analyzed further.
    -stem that is part of a sentence which includes the word stem and has affix the word on the sentence.
    -base is a of the be related with root and stem , which is where all the base can be said to root, but not all can be said to base. because the sentence base there can be two or more root.

    I'm soory if I do mistake in my opinion about that.

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  70. Nama : Friskawati Palembangan
    Nim : 15020125

    Steam is Valve's digital game distributor by purchasing an online payment via media downloads. With the Steam, strived for game piracy is rampant can be suppressed. How it works with Steam software download, so can be checked and immediately bought a game theres.

    Base is The only bone in the human body not connected to another is the hyois,a shaped bone located at the base of the tongue batween mandible and the voice box. Its function is to support the tongue and its muscles


    Root is English has a root in languages such as greek and latin and understanding of the roots of common words orcommon roots will help us to gues about the meaning of new words and strengthen our vocabulary substantially.

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  71. Fitriani Nurhaq
    15020124
    A Class

    Root is the core of the word. It is the morpheme that comprises the most important part of the word.

    The stem occurs after affixes have been added to the root.

    Base is the same as a root except that the root has no lexical that you can add prefixes or suffixes.

    For example : act = root, react = stem, reaction = base

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  72. - the root is a term to mention the form of said that can not be shared for, there can be analyzed again, there is no addition of particle again, root is there's always, in the form of a wide range of modification a leksem.
    Example:teach and good.

    - stem is part of said before given additional affix infleksional.
    Example:speaking= speak is a stem.

    - base is a form the basis in the process of morphology, where affix can be added, both affix infleksional and derivasional, in other words that all the root is also base, identification root,stem and base.
    Example:tables= table is a base.

    ReplyDelete
  73. Name:syaeful arsa yoga
    NIM:15020208


    In English grammar and morphology, a stem is the
    form of a word before any inflectional affixes are
    added. In English, most stems also qualify as
    words.
    The term base is commonly used by linguists to
    refer to any stem (or root) to which an affix is
    attached.
    See Examples and Observations below. Also see:
    EXAMPLES AND OBSERVATIONS
    Examples of word stems in English.
    Bound Morpheme and Free Morpheme
    Common Word Roots
    Compounding
    Conversion
    Derivation
    Lemma
    Morpheme
    Morphology
    Prefix and Suffix
    Replacive
    "A stem may consist of a single root, of two
    roots forming a compound stem, or of a root
    (or stem) and one or more derivational affixes
    forming a derived stem.


    "The three main morphological processes are
    compounding, affixation, and conversion.
    Compounding involves adding two stems
    together, as in . . . window-sill--or blackbird,
    daydream, and so on. . . . For the most part,
    affixes attach to free stems, i.e., stems that
    can stand alone as a word. Examples are to be
    found, however, where an affix is added to a
    bound stem--compare perishable, where
    perish is free, with durable, where dur is
    bound, or unkind, where kind is free, with
    unbeknown, where beknown is bound. . . .
    "Conversion is where a stem is derived
    without any change in form from one
    belonging to a different class. For example, the
    verb bottle (I must bottle some plums) is
    derived by conversion from the noun bottle,
    while the noun catch (That was a fine catch)
    is converted from the verb.


    The Difference Between a Base and a Stem
    "Base is the core of a word, that part of the
    word which is essential for looking up its
    meaning in the dictionary; stem is either the
    base by itself or the base plus another
    morpheme to which other morphemes can be
    added. [For example,] vary is both a base and
    a stem; when an affix is attached the base/stem
    is called a stem only. Other affixes can now be
    attached."

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  74. Name: SRIDESI
    Class: B/IV
    Nim: 15020202



    1. A root, or a root word, is a word that does not have a prefix in front of the word or a suffix at the end of the word. The root word is the primary lexical unit of a word, and of a word family (root is then called base word), which carries the most significant aspects of semantic content and cannot be reduced into smaller constituents. Content words in nearly all languages contain, and may consist only of root morphemes. However, sometimes the term "root" is also used to describe the word minus its inflectional endings, but with its lexical endings in place. For example, chatters has the inflectional root or lemma chatter, but the lexical root chat. Inflectional roots are often called stems, and a root in the stricter sense may be thought of as a monomorphemic stem.

    2. A stem is a part of a word. The term is used with slightly different meanings.In one usage, a stem is a form to which affixes can be attached.[1] Thus, in this usage, the English word friendships contains the stem friend, to which the derivational suffix -ship is attached to form a new stem friendship, to which the inflectional suffix -s is attached. In a variant of this usage, the root of the word (in the example, friend) is not counted as a stem.
    In a slightly different usage, which is adopted in the remainder of this article, a word has a single stem, namely the part of the word that is common to all its inflected variants.[2] Thus, in this usage, all derivational affixes are part of the stem. For example, the stem of friendships is friendship, to which the inflectional suffix -s is attached.

    3. Base is commonly used by linguists to refer to any stem (or root) to which an affix is attached.In morphology, a base is a bigger unit to which an affix attaches or to which a morphological process applies. "I shall try to use the term root to refer to a single morpheme which bears the 'core' meaning of a word

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  75. Root is the smallest meaningful part of a word. Stem is any morpheme which a syntactical affix can be added to Base is any morpheme which an affix can be added to. here agree is a root and base at the same time..it is a root because it is bare and an base because dis- and -ment can be added to it. disagree is a stem because its is a verb and by adding ment it changes to an adjective dis/ment are affixes. affixes can't stand alone in languages. they are added to bases to change their meaning both semantically and syntactically.

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  78. Name : Iva Musdalifah
    Nim : 15020141
    Class : A

    *Root is the part of a word that cannot be changed, and when added to creates different forms of the word, and the part of word that still exist after all derivational and inflectional afixes is deleted.
    For Example : Uncomfortable
    Un=prefix,Comfort=Root/free morpheme,able=free morpheme
    *Stem = - only about inflectional
    - simple or complex
    - Consist of two roots
    For Example : Uncomfortables >Uncomfortable = Stem
    *Base any part of a word that you can add inflection to, or that you can add prefixes/suffixes that change the meaning / part of speech.
    For Example : Comfortable = base of Uncomfortable.
    So all roots are bases but not all bases are roots.

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  79. SELVIANA YUSUF
    15020196
    B

    ROOT is the original form of a word without any additive,
    STEEM is a word by certain a affixes but not change the type of word, while BASE that all root and stem is the base but not all base can become root and stem.

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  80. Name : Hendra
    class :IV/A

    based on explaniation in class. I know if Root is the word that we cannot analyze agai. e.g (Play). and Stem Is word that we can ad Inflection and usually consist of two roots. e.g (Plays => Play is a stem. Base is the words that we can ad inflectiom to, or we can add suffix or prefix that change the meaning. e.g (Player=> Play is a base.

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  81. Name :Rati Wulandari
    Class:B

    #Root is part of the words related to the form of derivational and inflectional. Root can be changed and analyze more.

    #Stem is part of the words related to form of inflection. Stem can be complex word and consists of two roots.

    #Bases are part of the words related to the form of inflections and can add prefixes or suffixes. Not all bases can be a root, but root can be bases and stem.

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  82. Name : wahyuni
    Nim. :15020210
    Class : B
    1.Root
    root is the original form of a word without any additive.
    2.Stem
    STEM is an educational program developed to prepare primary and secondary students for college and graduate study in the fields of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM). In addition to subject-specific learning, STEM aims to foster inquiring minds, logical reasoning, and collaboration skills.
    3.Base
    A base is any unit whatsoever to which affixes of any kind can be added. The affixes attached to a base may be inflectional affixes selected for syntactic reasons or derivational affixes which alter the meaning or grammatical category of the base. An unadorned root like boy can be a base since it can have attached to it inflectional affixes like -s to form the plural boys or derivational affixes like -ish to tum the noun boy into the adjective boyish. In other words, all roots are bases. Bases are called stems only in the context of inflectional morphology. Example: faith, faithful, booksho.

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  83. Name : wahyuni
    Nim. :15020210
    Class : B
    1.Root
    root is the original form of a word without any additive.
    2.Stem
    STEM is an educational program developed to prepare primary and secondary students for college and graduate study in the fields of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM). In addition to subject-specific learning, STEM aims to foster inquiring minds, logical reasoning, and collaboration skills.
    3.Base
    A base is any unit whatsoever to which affixes of any kind can be added. The affixes attached to a base may be inflectional affixes selected for syntactic reasons or derivational affixes which alter the meaning or grammatical category of the base. An unadorned root like boy can be a base since it can have attached to it inflectional affixes like -s to form the plural boys or derivational affixes like -ish to tum the noun boy into the adjective boyish. In other words, all roots are bases. Bases are called stems only in the context of inflectional morphology. Example: faith, faithful, booksho.

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  84. Widiasty Husain
    1502013
    C

    Root is part of the words related to the form of derivational and inflectional. Root can be changed and analyze more.

    Stem is part of the words related to form of inflection. Stem can be complex word and consists of two roots.

    Bases are part of the words related to the form of inflections and can add prefixes or suffixes. Not all bases can be a root, but root can be bases and stem.

    ReplyDelete
  85. Widiasty Husain
    1502013
    C

    Root is part of the words related to the form of derivational and inflectional. Root can be changed and analyze more.

    Stem is part of the words related to form of inflection. Stem can be complex word and consists of two roots.

    Bases are part of the words related to the form of inflections and can add prefixes or suffixes. Not all bases can be a root, but root can be bases and stem.

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  86. name: Wahyuni.S
    class:b
    A.root : root is the original form of a word without any of affixes
    example :likes,dislike,disliked: like
    *like are noot from likes,dislike,and disliked
    B Stem : stem is a word from specific preffix but not change the typeof word.
    example: friend : friends(true)
    *friend is root form of noun and stem also a noun is friends.

    C.Base : all the root and stem is the base but not all of base could be the root and stem
    Example : unfriendly/friend/friendly/unfriend
    *base could be the friend,friendly or unfriend

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  87. Name : Yulia Yunara
    Class : B

    1. Root
    Root is the irreducible core of a word, with absolutely nothing else attached to it. Roots can be free morpheme or a word element which the other new words grow, usually through addition prefixes and suffixes.

    Example : unhappy, root : happy.


    2. Steam
    Steam is a word element to which grammatical or inflectional suffixes can be added. Every word that end with inflectional suffixes, we called it ‘steam’.

    Inflectional suffixes :

    –s (plural)
    –s (possessive)
    –s (third singular person)
    –ed (past tense)
    –en (past participle)
    –ing (present participle)
    –er (comparative)
    –est (superlative)
    Example :

    Bag (root) – bag(s) = bags (steam)

    Play (root) – play(er)(base)+(s) = players (steam)



    3. Base
    Base I any unit to which affixes of any kind derivational/lexical affixes can be added. All roots are bases. Bases are called steams only in the context of inflectional morphology.

    Example :

    Like (root) + -dis = dislike(base)+ -ed (inflectional suffixes) = disliked( steam)

    It means that stem ‘disliked’ come from base ‘dislike’

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  88. In my understanding about the explanation,

    Root is the original form of word without any affixes added.

    Steam is a word which was given particular additive but does not change the kind words, and all inflectional affixes has removed.

    Bases are part of the words related to the form of inflections and can add prefixes or suffixes. All the root and the stem is the base but not all of the base may be the root and stem.

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  89. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  90. based on my opinion..
    ‘Root’, ‘stem’ and ‘base’ are all terms used in the literature to designate that part of a word that remains when all affixes have been removed.

    A root is a form which is not further analysable, either in terms of derivational or inflectional morphology. It is that part of word-form that remains when all inflectional and derivational affixes have been removed. A root is the basic part always present in a lexeme. In the form ‘untouchables’ the root is ‘touch’, to which first the suffix ‘-able’, then the prefix ‘un-‘ and finally the suffix ‘-s’ have been added. In a compound word like ‘wheelchair’ there are two roots, ‘wheel’ and ‘chair’.

    A stem is of concern only when dealing with inflectional morphology.
    In the form ‘untouchables’ the stem is ‘untouchable’, although in the form ‘touched’ the stem is ‘touch’; in the form ‘wheelchairs’ the stem is ‘wheelchair’, even though the stem contains two roots.

    A base is any form to which affixes of any kind can be added. This means that any root or any stem can be termed a base, but the set of bases is not exhausted by the union of the set of roots and the set of stems: a derivationally analysable form to which derivational affixes are added can only be referred to as a base. That is, ‘touchable’ can act as a base for prefixation to give ‘untouchable’, but in this process ‘touchable’ could not be referred to as a root because it is analysable in terms of derivational morphology, nor as a stem since it is not the adding of inflectional affixes which is in question.

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  91. Name : wisnu agung n.p.
    Class : c

    -a root is word cannot be chaned
    -a stem is the form that all the inflections
    -a base is any part of a word that you can add inflections to

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  92. based on my opinion..
    ‘Root’, ‘stem’ and ‘base’ are all terms used in the literature to designate that part of a word that remains when all affixes have been removed.

    A root is a form which is not further analysable, either in terms of derivational or inflectional morphology. It is that part of word-form that remains when all inflectional and derivational affixes have been removed. A root is the basic part always present in a lexeme. In the form ‘untouchables’ the root is ‘touch’, to which first the suffix ‘-able’, then the prefix ‘un-‘ and finally the suffix ‘-s’ have been added. In a compound word like ‘wheelchair’ there are two roots, ‘wheel’ and ‘chair’.

    A stem is of concern only when dealing with inflectional morphology.
    In the form ‘untouchables’ the stem is ‘untouchable’, although in the form ‘touched’ the stem is ‘touch’; in the form ‘wheelchairs’ the stem is ‘wheelchair’, even though the stem contains two roots.

    A base is any form to which affixes of any kind can be added. This means that any root or any stem can be termed a base, but the set of bases is not exhausted by the union of the set of roots and the set of stems: a derivationally analysable form to which derivational affixes are added can only be referred to as a base. That is, ‘touchable’ can act as a base for prefixation to give ‘untouchable’, but in this process ‘touchable’ could not be referred to as a root because it is analysable in terms of derivational morphology, nor as a stem since it is not the adding of inflectional affixes which is in question.

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  93. Based on this blog, we can make conclusion; root is unit which cant analyze or separated to get a new meaning. Stem related to inflectional morphology, ut can be adding by affix. Meanwhile bases is root and stem but bases group not comprehensive with the set of root and stem. Form that can be described affixes to which can be added called bases.

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  94. Name:Endhita
    Nim :15020119

    1.)rooot is the original form of a word, without any affix or can be the root is the base word.
    Example:likes,dislike=Like
    Like is the root of dislike and likes.
    2.) stem is a word which was given particular affix but does not change the type of word. root is a noun, then stem is a noun if the root adjective then stem adjective.
    Example:
    Friend:friends(true)
    friend is the root form of the noun, the stem that is used is a noun that friends
    Friend:friendly(wrong)
    friend is a noun while the friendly is an adjective. so dissimilar!
    3.)Base all root and stem is the base but not all base can become root and stem.
    determine root and steam.
    untouchable:
    root:touchable
    Stem:untouchable
    Because both are adjectives . Remember!root and stem are the words of the same type

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  95. "Root" "stem" and "base" are all terms used in the literature to designate that part of a word that remains when all affixes have been removed.

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  96. 1.Root is part of the words related to the form of derivational and inflectional. Root can be changed and analyze more.
    2. Stem is part of the words related to form of inflection. Stem can be complex word and consists of two roots.
    3. Bases are part of the words related to the form of inflections and can add prefixes or suffixes. Not all bases can be a root, but root can be bases and stem.

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  97. 1. The root of the word is the part of a word form that remains when all the inflexional and derivational affixes are removed. The root of the word is the fundamental part that is always present in a leksem.

    2. Stem is the remaining part of the word form when all inflexional affixes are removed.

    3. Bases is a form to which affixes are added, any affixes, either inflectional affixes or derivational affixes.

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  98. Name : Herliantisari
    Class : A
    Nim : 15020129

    1. Root : root is the part of a word that cannot be changed, and when added to creates different forms of the word. Example : walk is a root and be changed in many ways like walking and walked.
    2. Stem : stem is the form a word that inflections get added onto. Most of the time this will be the root 'walk' is the form that all the inflections
    3. Base : base is any part af a word that you can add inflections to, or that you can add prefixes/suffixes that change the meaning/part of spech. So 'walk' is also base because it can have inflections (walking) and can be turned into different words ( walker is a noun )

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  99. Name : Andi zulKifli
    Nim : 15021554
    Based on this blog, we can make conclusion; root is unit which cant analyze or separated to get a new meaning. Stem related to inflectional morphology, ut can be adding by affix. Meanwhile bases is root and stem but bases group not comprehensive with the set of root and stem. Form that can be described affixes to which can be added called bases.

    ReplyDelete
  100. Name : Hidayah Magfirah
    Nim : 15020132
    Class : A

    -Root is the element on which the formation of the word.
    -Stem is a morpheme, word, or phrase that joining affixes (without inflectional affixes).
    -Base is a morpheme that can be expanded with spiked affixes.

    ReplyDelete
  101. Baskara Fitra R
    15020108

    What I get in class that I can give a conclusion

    Root is the original form of word without any affixes added, so root is a word that can not be changed.

    Steam is a word which was given particular additive but does not change the kind words, and all inflectional affixes has removed.

    Bases are part of the words related to the form of inflections and can add prefixes or suffixes. All the root and the stem is the base but not all of the base may be the root and stem.

    ReplyDelete
  102. Root is a word that can not be analyzed anymore. Steam is a word that can add only with inflection. Base is a word that can be added by inflection and derifation.

    ReplyDelete
  103. Name : Hariani
    Nim : 16020145
    Class: IV/B

    Assalamu'alaikim warahmatullahi wabarakatuh

    A ROOT is the part of a word that cannot be changed, and when added to creates different forms of the word:

    "Walk" is a root, and can be changed in many ways: walking, walked, walker, walkie-talkie, sidewalk, walk-light, walks etc. You will never have a word related to walking where the "walk" part gets changed, so it is a root.

    Most of the time the root forms a word on its own, but sometimes they do not.
    complete, replete, expletive: these all have the root "plete", which happens to not be a word on its own.


    A STEM is the form of a word that inflections get added onto. Most of the time this will be the root. "Walk" is the form that all the inflections (grammar-affecting changes) gets added to, when you add ~ing to it, it turns into a progressive verb or a gerund. ~ed turns it perfect. ~s makes it a plural noun, or makes it agree with a singular subject.


    A BASE is any part of a word that you can add inflections to, or that you can add prefixes/suffixes that change the meaning/part of speech. So "walk" is also a base, because it can have inflections (walking) and can be turned into different words (walker is a noun). Walker is also a base, because you can modify it inflectionally (walkers is plural), and because it can have things added to derive new words (dog-walker).

    So all roots are bases because they are the smallest chunk that stays the same despite additions.

    Not all bases are roots though, because sometimes the root+inflection or root+derivation goes on to take additional changes. (Walker is a base, but the root is still walk).

    Stems are just bases when you are talking about inflectional changes (-ed, -ing, -s, etc.)

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  104. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  105. Name : Alisa meilani
    Nim : 16020111
    Class : A

    A root is the part of a word that cannot be changed, and when added to creates different forms of the word:

    "Walk" is a root, and can be changed in many ways: walking, walked, walker, walkie-talkie, sidewalk, walk-light, walks etc. You will never have a word related to walking where the "walk" part gets changed, so it is a root.

    A stem is the form of a word that inflections get added onto. Most of the time this will be the root. "Walk" is the form that all the inflections (grammar-affecting changes) gets added to, when you add ~ing to it, it turns into a progressive verb or a gerund. ~ed turns it perfect. ~s makes it a plural noun, or makes it agree with a singular subject.
    Stems are just bases when you are talking about inflectional changes (-ed, -ing, -s, etc.).

    A base is any part of a word that you can add inflections to, or that you can add prefixes/suffixes that change the meaning/part of speech. So "walk" is also a base, because it can have inflections (walking) and can be turned into different words (walker is a noun). Walker is also a base, because you can modify it inflectionally (walkers is plural), and because it can have things added to derive new words (dog-walker).
    **Thank You**

    ReplyDelete
  106. Name : Desry Herarinry
    Nim : 16020129
    Class : A

    Root is the irreducible core of a word, with absolutely nothing else attached to it. Roots can be free morpheme or a word element which the other new words grow, usually through addition prefixes and suffixes.
    Example : unhappy, root : happy.

    Stem is a word element to which grammatical or inflectional suffixes can be added. Every word that end with inflectional suffixes, we called it ‘stem’
    Example :Bag (root) – bag(s) = bags (stem)

    Base I any unit to which affixes of any kind derivational/lexical affixes can be added. All roots are bases. Bases are called steams only in the context of inflectional morphology.
    Example :Like (root) + -dis = dislike(base)+ -ed (inflectional suffixes) = disliked( stem)
    -Thank you

    ReplyDelete
  107. Name:Darma Darwis
    Class:A(IV)
    Reg.No:16020125

    1. Root is the part of a word that cannot be changed,and when added to creates different forms of the word.
    Example:
    a)Account,can be changed in many ways:accounts,accounting,accounterments,accounted,accountant,accountany,accountable and accontability.

    2. Stem are just bases when you are talking about inflectional changes.
    Example:
    a). Accounted
    -accont=root
    -ed=stem

    3. Base any part of aword that you can add inflections to,or that you can add preffixes/suffies that change the meaning..
    Example:
    a) Accounted=base of unaccounted

    Thats all,thank you...

    ReplyDelete
  108. Name : aprilia udinsyah putri
    Reg.no:16020120
    1. Root is rhe part of word that still exist after all derivational and inflectional afixes is deleted.
    Example: attain(able,ed,ing,ment)

    2.stem the form of a word that inflections get added onto
    Example: attain(ing)

    3. Base any part of a word that you can add inflections to,or that you can add prefixes/suffiex that change the meaning
    Example: un(attaining) base of unattaining

    ReplyDelete
  109. Name:Erni
    Reg. No:16020135
    1. Root is the part of a word that cannot be changed,and when added to creates different forms of the word.
    Example:
    a)abash,ed,ment

    2. Stem are just bases when you are talking about inflectional changes.
    Example:
    a). Abashment
    -abash=root
    -ment=stem

    3. Base any part of aword that you can add inflections to,or that you can add preffixes/suffies that change the meaning..
    Example:
    a) abashment= base of unabashment

    ReplyDelete
  110. Name:Annisa yola karel paingi
    Nim: 16020119
    Class : A
    Root is part of the words related to the form of derivational and inflectional. Root can be changed and analyze more.

    Stem is part of the words related to form of inflection. Stem can be complex word and consists of two roots.

    Bases are part of the words related to the form of inflections and can add prefixes or suffixes. Not all bases can be a root, but root can be bases and stem.

    ReplyDelete
  111. Name:Linda Tappi
    Nim : 16020165
    Class :B
    Root is the original form of word without any affixes added, so root is a word that can not be changed.

    Steam is a word which was given particular additive but does not change the kind words, and all inflectional affixes has removed.

    Bases are part of the words related to the form of inflections and can add prefixes or suffixes. All the root and the stem is the base but not all of the base may be the root and stem.

    ReplyDelete
  112. Name : Ady irawan
    Class : IV/A

    Root is the original form of word without any affixes added, so root is a word that can not be changed.

    Steam is a word which was given particular additive but does not change the kind words, and all inflectional affixes has removed.

    Bases are part of the words related to the form of inflections and can add prefixes or suffixes. All the root and the stem is the base but not all of the base may be the root and stem.

    - Root is the part of a word that cannot be changed, and when added to creates different form of the word :
    “ walk”, is a root, and can be changed in many ways : walking, walked, walker, walkie-talkie, sidewalk, walk-light, walks etc. You will never have a word related to walking where the “walk” part gets changed, so it is a root.

    - Stem is the form of a word that inflection get added on to. Most of the time this will be the root. “walk” is the form that all the inflection (grammar-affecting changes) get added to, when you add-ing to it, it turns into a progressive verb or a gerund-ed turns it perfect. –s makes it a plural noun, or makes it agree with a singular subject.

    - Base is any part of a word that you can add inflection to, or that you can add prefixes/suffixes that change the meaning/part of speech. So “walk” is also base, because it can have inflection (walking) and can be turned into different word (walker is a noun). Walker is also a base, because you can modify it inflectionally (walker is plural), and because it can have things added to drive new words (dog walker).

    So all roots are bases because they are the smallest chunk that stays the same despite additions.
    Not all base are roots though, because sometimes the root + inflection or root + derivation goes on to take additional changes. (walker is the root is still walk)
    Stem are just bases when you are talking about inflectional changes (-ed, -ing, -s, etc).

    ReplyDelete
  113. Name : Andi Astarina
    Class : A/IV
    Nim. : 16020113

    Based on the explanation in class, what can i get is ;
    Its simple explanation to understanding the material
    Root stem and base
    #Root
    Root is the part of a word that cannot be changed, and when added to creates different forms of the word, and the part of word that still exist after all derivational and inflectional afixes is deleted
    For Example = Walk" =>> a root,
    can be changed in many ways:
    walking, walked, walker,
    walkie-talkie, sidewalk,
    walk-light, walks etc.
    You will never have a word related to walking where
    the "walk" part gets changed,
    so it is a root.
    #Stem
    stem > only about inflectional
    stem > simple or complex
    stem > consist of two roots
    Example =
    untouchables >>
    untouchable => stem
    #Base
    any part of a word that you can add inflections to, or that you can add prefixes/suffixes that change the meaning/part of speech
    Example = touchable => base of untouchable
    So allroots are bases but not all bases are roots

    ReplyDelete

  114. Name : AnandaAwalia
    Nim : 16020112
    Class : A
    *Root is the part of a word that cannot be changed, and when added to creates different forms of the word, and the part of word that still exist after all derivational and inflectional afixes is deleted
    *Stem is part of the words related to form of inflection. Stem can be complex word and consists of two roots.
    *Base I any unit to which affixes of any kind derivational/lexical affixes can be added. All roots are bases. Bases are called steams only in the context of inflectional morphology.
    discussion:
    root = Touchable
    stem = untouchable
    reason: as both an adjective, remember it root and steam are the words of the same type.

    ReplyDelete
  115. Name : Herlinawati
    NIM : 16020150
    Class : B/IV

    ROOT, STEM, and BASE

    1. Root

    Root is the irreducible core of a word, with absolutely nothing else attached to it. Roots can be free morpheme or a word element which the other new words grow, usually through addition prefixes and suffixes.

    Example : Misunderstand, root : Understand.

    2. Stem

    Stem is a word element to which grammatical or inflectional suffixes can be added. Every word that end with inflectional suffixes, we called it ‘stem’.

    Inflectional suffixes :
    1. –s (plural)
    2. –s (possessive)
    3. –s (third singular person)
    4. –ed (past tense)
    5. –en (past participle)
    6. –ing (present participle)
    7. –er (comparative)
    8. –est (superlative)

    Example :
    Stay (root) – Stay(s) = Stays (stem)
    Game (root) – Game(er) = (base)+(s) = Gamers (stem)

    3. Base

    Base I any unit to which affixes of any kind derivational/lexical affixes can be added. All roots are bases. Bases are called steams only in the context of inflectional morphology.

    Example :
    Like (root) + -dis = dislike(base)+ -ed (inflectional suffixes) = disliked( stem)
    It means that stem ‘disliked’ come from base ‘dislike’

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Name :Andi yustika nur
      Nim :16020116
      Class:A

      Root is the original form of a word without any increment Ex.
      Like :root

      Stem one of the words than given a certain affix but one change the word.
      Ex.
      Friends:stem

      Base all root and stem is base but not all base can be root and stem.
      Ex.
      Unfriendly:base

      Delete
  116. Name : Nasrianti
    No Reg : 16020176
    Classv : IV/B
    • Root is the irreducible core of a word, with absolutely nothing else attached to it. Roots can be free morpheme or a word element which the other new words grow, usually through addition prefixes and suffixes.
    Example : unhappy, root : happy.
    • Steam is a word element to which grammatical or inflectional suffixes can be added. Every word that end with inflectional suffixes, we called it ‘steam’.
    Example :
    Bag (root) – bag(s) = bags (steam)
    Play (root) – play(er)(base)+(s) = players (steam)
    • Base is any unit to which affixes of any kind derivational/lexical affixes can be added. All roots are bases. Bases are called steams only in the context of inflectional morphology.
    Example :
    Like (root) + -dis = dislike(base)+ -ed (inflectional suffixes) = disliked( steam)
    It means that stem ‘disliked’ come from base ‘dislike’

    ReplyDelete
  117. Name:Ningsih
    Class:B/IV
    NIM:16020178

    1. ROOT
    What is root ?? Hearing the word root must be imagined in our minds is the root .. But we are here to discuss the word instead of discussing plants. To understand it directly to the example only

    likes, dislike, disliked = like
    explanation: like is the root of likes, dislike and disliked

    That means root is the original form of a word without any affix.

    2. STEM
    Steam is a given word given but does not change the type of word. For example root is a noun then steam should be a noun, if root adjectives then steam is also an adjective
    example

    friend = friends (true)
    explanation: friend is root in the form of a noun then the stem is also a noun that is friends

    friend = friendly (wrong)
    explanation: friend is a noun whereas friendly is an adjective so it is not the same

    3. BASE
    All root and stem are base but not all base can be root and stem. example

    unfriendly = friend / friendly / unfriend

     
    explanation: her bus base friend, friendly or unfriend

    >>> The example specifies the root and stem of a base, for example

    Determine the root and steam of the word UNTOUCHABLE !!!

    Discussion:
    root = touchable
    stem = untouchable
    reason: because both are adjectives, remember root and steam are words of the same type.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Name : Mindy Fadya Anugrah
      Class: IV/B
      Nim : 16020170

      Root is the form that can not analyzed more.
      For example:
      -read
      -swim
      -eat

      Stem is the form of a word that inflections get added onto
      For example:
      -friends
      -books
      -collected

      Base is any part of a word that you can add inflections to,or that you can add prefix and suffix that change the meaning/part of speech.
      For example:
      Reaction=base is react
      Cats=base is cat

      Delete
    2. Name : Mindy Fadya Anugrah
      Class: IV/B
      Nim : 16020170

      Root is the form that can not analyzed more.
      For example:
      -read
      -swim
      -eat

      Stem is the form of a word that inflections get added onto
      For example:
      -friends
      -books
      -collected

      Base is any part of a word that you can add inflections to,or that you can add prefix and suffix that change the meaning/part of speech.
      For example:
      Reaction=base is react
      Cats=base is cat

      Delete
  118. Name : Indri Selianti
    No.card : 16020154
    Class/ Semester : IV/ B

    ROOT, BASE, and STEAM
    1. Root
    Root is the irreducible core of a word, with
    absolutely nothing else attached to it.
    Roots can be free morpheme or a word
    element which the other new words grow,
    usually through addition prefixes and
    suffixes.
    Example : unhappy, root : happy.

    2. Steam
    Steam is a word element to which
    grammatical or inflectional suffixes can be
    added. Every word that end with
    inflectional suffixes, we called it ‘steam’.
    Inflectional suffixes :
    1. –s (plural)
    2. –s (possessive)
    3. –s (third singular person)
    4. –ed (past tense)
    5. –en (past participle)
    6. –ing (present participle)
    7. –er (comparative)
    8. –est (superlative)
    Example :
    Bag (root) – bag(s) = bags (steam)
    Play (root) – play(er)(base)+(s) = players
    (steam)

    3. Base
    Base I any unit to which affixes of any kind
    derivational/lexical affixes can be added.
    All roots are bases. Bases are called steams
    only in the context of inflectional
    morphology.
    Example :
    Like (root) + -dis = dislike(base)+ -ed
    (inflectional suffixes) = disliked( steam)
    It means that stem ‘disliked’ come from
    base ‘dislike’.
    That's another article I've got
    and thanks you ..
    you have taught me by your art.

    ReplyDelete
  119. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  120. Nama : Anggi Putri Evilian
    Nim : 16020118
    Kelas: A


    1. Root is the irreducible core of a word, with absolutely nothing else attached to it. Roots can be free morpheme or a word element wh ich the other new words grow, usually through addition prefixes and suffixes.
    Example : unhappy, root : happy.
    2. Steam is a word element to which grammatical or inflectional suffixes can be added. Every word that end with inflectional suffixes, we called it ‘steam’.
    Example :
    Bag (root) – bag(s) = bags (steam)
    Play (root) – play(er)(base)+(s) = players (steam)
    3.Base I any unit to which affixes of any kind derivational/lexical affixes can be added. All roots are bases. Bases are called steams only in the context of inflectional morphology.
    Example :
    Like (root) + -dis = dislike(base)+ -ed (inflectional suffixes) = disliked( steam)
    It means that stem ‘disliked’ come from base ‘dislike’

    ReplyDelete
  121. Name : Herlinawati
    NIM : 16020150
    Class : B/IV

    ROOT, STEM, and BASE

    1. Root

    Root is the irreducible core of a word, with absolutely nothing else attached to it. Roots can be free morpheme or a word element which the other new words grow, usually through addition prefixes and suffixes.

    Example : Misunderstand, root : Understand.

    2. Stem

    Stem is a word element to which grammatical or inflectional suffixes can be added. Every word that end with inflectional suffixes, we called it ‘stem’.

    Inflectional suffixes :
    1. –s (plural)
    2. –s (possessive)
    3. –s (third singular person)
    4. –ed (past tense)
    5. –en (past participle)
    6. –ing (present participle)
    7. –er (comparative)
    8. –est (superlative)

    Example :
    Stay (root) – Stay(s) = Stays (stem)
    Game (root) – Game(er) = (base)+(s) = Gamers (stem)

    3. Base

    Base I any unit to which affixes of any kind derivational/lexical affixes can be added. All roots are bases. Bases are called steams only in the context of inflectional morphology.

    Example :
    Like (root) + -dis = dislike(base)+ -ed (inflectional suffixes) = disliked( stem)
    It means that stem ‘disliked’ come from base ‘dislike’

    ReplyDelete
  122. The explanation above that telling us about to show the part of word that has left when all affixes is missed,which are Root,Stem,Base.
    # Root= original form of word with no affixes inside.
    For example= science,see,punish.
    # Stem= form of word that has left if implection is missed.
    For example= playing-play,unforgetable-forget,dividing-divide.
    # Base= we can add implectional or we can add affixes that can change the meaning.
    For example= Friends.
    To explanation above that Friend is Root but Friend is not root and also not stem that is none other base. But if we adding (s)= Friends into Friend it is stem.

    ReplyDelete
  123. Name : Nuresa
    NIM : 16020183
    Class : B/IV
    A root is the part of a word that cannot be changed, and when added to creates different forms of the word:

    "Walk" is a root, and can be changed in many ways: walking, walked, walker, walks etc. You will never have a word related to walking where the "walk" part gets changed, so it is a root.

    Most of the time the root forms a word on its own, but sometimes they do not.
    complete, replete, expletive: these all have the root "plete", which happens to not be a word on its own.


    A stem is the form of a word that inflections get added onto. Most of the time this will be the root. "Walk" is the form that all the inflections (grammar-affecting changes) gets added to, when you add ~ing to it, it turns into a progressive verb or a gerund. ~ed turns it perfect. ~s makes it a plural noun, or makes it agree with a singular subject.
    Stems are just bases when you are talking about inflectional changes (-ed, -ing, -s, etc.).

    A base is any part of a word that you can add inflections to, or that you can add prefixes/suffixes that change the meaning/part of speech. So "walk" is also a base, because it can have inflections (walking) and can be turned into different words (walker is a noun). Walker is also a base, because you can modify it inflectionally (walkers is plural), and because it can have things added to derive new words (dog-walker).

    So all roots are bases because they are the smallest chunk that stays the same despite additions.

    Not all bases are roots though, because sometimes the root+inflection or root+derivation goes on to take additional changes. (Walker is a base, but the root is still walk).

    Thank You.

    ReplyDelete
  124. Name : Nur Syahria
    NIM : 16020182
    Class : B/IV
    Root is the irreducible core of a word, with absolutely nothing else attached to it. Roots can be free morpheme or a word element which the other new words grow, usually through addition prefixes and suffixes.
    Example : unhappy, root : happy.

    Steam is a word element to which grammatical or inflectional suffixes can be added. Every word that end with inflectional suffixes, we called it ‘steam’.
    Inflectional suffixes :
    Example :
    Bag (root) – bag(s) = bags (steam)
    Play (root) – play(er)(base)+(s) = players (steam)

    Base I any unit to which affixes of any kind derivational/lexical affixes can be added. All roots are bases. Bases are called steams only in the context of inflectional morphology.
    Example :
    Like (root) + -dis = dislike(base)+ -ed (inflectional suffixes) = disliked( steam)
    It means that stem ‘disliked’ come from base ‘dislike’


    ReplyDelete
  125. Name : Leni Marlina
    NIM : 16020164
    Class : B/IV

    A root is a form which is not further analysable, either in terms of derivational or inflectional morphology. It is that part of word-form that remains when all inflectional and derivational affixes have been removed. A root is the basic part always present in a lexeme.
    Example :
    ‘untouchables’ the root is ‘touch’, to which first the suffix ‘-able’, then the prefix ‘un-‘ and finally the suffix ‘-s’ have been added. In a compound word like ‘wheelchair’ there are two roots, ‘wheel’ and ‘chair’.

    A stem is of concern only when dealing with inflectional morphology.
    Example :
    ‘untouchables’ the stem is ‘untouchable’, although in the form ‘touched’ the stem is ‘touch’; in the form ‘wheelchairs’ the stem is ‘wheelchair’, even though the stem contains two roots.

    A base is any form to which affixes of any kind can be added. This means that any root or any stem can be termed a base, but the set of bases is not exhausted by the union of the set of roots and the set of stems: a derivationally analysable form to which derivational affixes are added can only be referred to as a base. That is, ‘touchable’ can act as a base for prefixation to give ‘untouchable’, but in this process ‘touchable’ could not be referred to as a root because it is analysable in terms of derivational morphology, nor as a stem since it is not the adding of inflectional affixes which is in question

    ReplyDelete
  126. NAME:PAJRIANI
    NIM:16020186
    CLASS:B/IV

    The explanation above that telling us about term that used in literatur to show the part of word that has left when all affixes is missed, which are root, stem, and bases.

    # ROOT = original form of word with no affixes inside.
    for the example = look, see, believe, sit.

    # STEM = form of word that has left if implectional is missed.
    for the example = playing - play, watching - watch, and kissing - kiss.

    # BASES = we can add implectional or we can add affixes that can change the meaning.
    for the example = worker
    for the explanation above that WORK is ROOT but WORKER is not ROOT and also not STEM that is none other BASES. But if we adding (s) = WORKERS into WORKER it is STEM.

    ReplyDelete
  127. NAME: NUR HIKMA
    NIM:16020180
    CLASS:B/IV

    1. ROOT
    What is the root ?? Hearing the root word certainly imagined in our minds that the roots , But we are here to discuss not discuss the said plant. To understand it directly to the examples

    likes, dislike, disliked = like
    explanation: like is the root of likes, dislike and disliked

    That means the root of a word merupakaan original form without any additive.

    2. STEM
    Steam is a word which was given particular additive but does not change the kind words. For example, the root is a noun then steamnya should be a noun, if the root adjective then steam also adjective .Here
    example

    friend = friends (right)
    explanation: friend is the root form of the noun it stemnya also a noun that friends

    friend = user (one)
    explanation: friend is friendly whereas the noun is an adjective so dissimilar

    3. BASE
    All the root and the stem is the base but not all of the base may be the root and stem. example

    unfriendly = friend / user / unfriend
    explanation: its base bis friend, friendly or unfriend.

    ReplyDelete
  128. NAME:ISRADAYANTI
    NIM:16020156
    CLASS:B/IV

    I will give you all a simple explanation of root,stem and base .
    ●Roots are words that create base for any word that has a meaning with no suffix or prefix. Basically these words create origin for the word that help in defining. Root words have their own meaning, idea or concept. Root words are already small in size having meaning and these cannot be further reduced.
    Example;
    Geology - Geo is the root word
    Capture - Cap is the root word
    ●Stems are words that is used for joining words.
    Example;Photosynthesis - syn is the stem word
    ●BASE Words are a words that can stand alone.
    Example; from worker word - base of worker is work.

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  130. Name:magfirah asnan
    Nim :16020167
    Class:B/IV

    1.Root
    root Is original form of a word without any affix.
    Example
    likes, dislike, disliked = like
    explanation: like is the root of likes, dislike and disliked
    2. STEM
    Steam is a word given a certain affix but does not change the type of word. For example root is a noun then steam should be a noun, if root adjectives then steam is also an adjective
    example
    friend = friends (true)
    explanation: friend is root in the form of a noun then the stem is also a noun that is friends
    friend = friendly (wrong)
    explanation: friend is a noun whereas friendly is an adjective so it is not the same
    3. BASE
    All root and stem are base but not all base can be root and stem.
    example
    unfriendly = friend / friendly / unfriend
    explanation: her bus base friend, friendly or unfriend.

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  131. Nama:magfirah asnan
    Nim :16020167
    Class:B/IV
    1.Root
    root Is original form of a word without any affix.
    Example
    likes, dislike, disliked = like
    explanation: like is the root of likes, dislike and disliked
    2. STEM
    Steam is a word given a certain affix but does not change the type of word. For example root is a noun then steam should be a noun, if root adjectives then steam is also an adjective
    example
    friend = friends (true)
    explanation: friend is root in the form of a noun then the stem is also a noun that is friends
    friend = friendly (wrong)
    explanation: friend is a noun whereas friendly is an adjective so it is not the same
    3. BASE
    All root and stem are base but not all base can be root and stem.
    example
    unfriendly = friend / friendly / unfriend
    explanation: her bus base friend, friendly or unfriend.

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  132. Name: Kiki arena aksari
    Nim : 16020161
    class: B

    Assalamualaikum wr. wb
    1. Root is the part of word that cannot be changed and when added to creates different forms of the word
    Example:
    Likes, dislike, disliked: like
    explenation: like is root from likes, dislike, and dislike it means root is the original form of a word without increment

    2. Stem the from of a word that inflections get added onto.
    Example:
    Friend: Friends
    explenation: Friend is root a noun the stem is also a noun that is Friends

    3. Base Any part of a word that you can add inflections to, or that you can add prefixess/sufixxes that change the meaning/ part of speech.
    Example:
    Unfriendly: Friend/Friends/unfriend
    Explenation: base can Friend, Friendly or Unfriend.

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  133. Name :Hasfilan
    Nim :16020147
    Class:IV/B

    Steam, Base, and Root

    Root

    Root is the irreducible core of a word, with absolutely nothing else attached to it. Roots can be free morpheme or a word element which the other new words grow, usually through addition prefixes and suffixes.

    Example : unhappy, root : happy.

    Steam

    Steam is a word element to which grammatical or inflectional suffixes can be added. Every word that end with inflectional suffixes, we called it ‘steam’.

    Inflectional suffixes :

    –s (plural)–s (possessive)–s (third singular person)–ed (past tense)–en (past participle)–ing (present participle)–er (comparative)–est (superlative)

    Example :

    Bag (root) – bag(s) = bags (steam)

    Play (root) – play(er)(base)+(s) = players (steam)

     

     

    Base

    Base I any unit to which affixes of any kind derivational/lexical affixes can be added. All roots are bases. Bases are called steams only in the context of inflectional morphology.

    Example :

    Like (root) + -dis = dislike(base)+ -ed (inflectional suffixes) = disliked( steam)

    It means that stem ‘disliked’ come from base ‘dislike’

     

    Affixes

    Affixes is a morpheme (bound morpheme) which only occurs when attached to some other morphemes such as a root, steam or base. 

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  134. Name : hastuti
    Nim : 16020149
    Class : B/IV

    Root, Stem and Base.

    A root
    Root is the part of a word that cannot be changed, and when added to creates different forms of the word:

    Example.."Walk" is a root, and can be changed in many ways: walking, walked, walker, walkie-talkie, sidewalk, walk-light, walks etc.

    Most of the time the root forms a word on its own, but sometimes they do not.
    complete, replete, expletive: these all have the root "plete", which happens to not be a word on its own.

    steam is part of word that only speak up about inflection, when steam can have two roots and steam also can be simple or complex word, this is steam the given word affix spesific but not change the types of word.
    for example
    friends=friend
    explanation
    friend is steam from friends. if you want know where steam from friends you must look the inflection, and you must delete suffix it is S so friend can be steam.


    • Base is any unit to which affixes of any kind derivational/lexical affixes can be added. All roots are bases. Bases are called steams only in the context of inflectional morphology.
    Example :
    Like (root) + -dis = dislike(base)+ -ed (inflectional suffixes) = disliked( steam)
    It means that stem ‘disliked’ come from base ‘dislike’

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  135. Name : Karmiati
    NIM : 16020160
    Class: IV/B

    A root is a form which is not further analysable, either in terms of derivational or inflectional morphology. It is that part of word-form that remains when all inflectional and derivational affixes have been removed. A root is the basic part always present in a lexeme. In the form ‘untouchables’ the root is ‘touch’, to which first the suffix ‘-able’, then the prefix ‘un-‘ and finally the suffix ‘-s’ have been added. In a compound word like ‘wheelchair’ there are two roots, ‘wheel’ and ‘chair’.

    A stem is of concern only when dealing with inflectional morphology.

    In the form ‘untouchables’ the stem is ‘untouchable’, although in the form ‘touched’ the stem is ‘touch’; in the form ‘wheelchairs’ the stem is ‘wheelchair’, even though the stem contains two roots.

    A base is any form to which affixes of any kind can be added. This means that any root or any stem can be termed a base, but the set of bases is not exhausted by the union of the set of roots and the set of stems: a derivationally analysable form to which derivational affixes are added can only be referred to as a base. That is, ‘touchable’ can act as a base for prefixation to give ‘untouchable’, but in this process ‘touchable’ could not be referred to as a root because it is analysable in terms of derivational morphology, nor as a stem since it is not the adding of inflectional affixes which is in question.

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  136. Name :Karmi Megasari
    Nim :16020159
    Class:IV/B

    Words are made up of roots, bases, stems, derivational endings, inflectional endings, and occasionally clitics. Not everyone agrees on these forms or on the names of them. This includes Katamba.

    If we include base-extenders (stem-extenders_ as some kind of near-morph or submorph, then a root is that part of a word from which all affixes and stem-extenders have been removed. A root differs partially from a stem in that a stem must have lexical meaning. A root has no lexical meaning and the semantic range of the root is vague if there is any at all. A stem may contain derivational affixes.

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  137. Name: novi mentari
    Nim: 16020179
    Class:IV/ B

    Root is the form that can not analyzed more. Are there in derivational or inflectional term.

    Root is the part of a word that cannot be changed and when added to creates different forms of the word.

    Walk> a root
    Can be changed in many ways:
    Walking,walked,walker, walkie,talkie sidewalk, walk light,walks

    Touch= a root

    Stem= the form of a word that inflection get added onto

    Stem= are just bases when you are talking about inflectional changes( ed- ing)
    Untouchable= stem

    Base= any part of a word that you can add inflection to or that

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  138. Name : Jannatul Islamiyah K
    Class : B/IV
    NIM : 16020157

    Assalamu'alaikum warahmatullahi wabarakatuh.
    Basen on your explanation in my class i get that:
    1. Root : the part of word that can't be changed, and when added to creates differeat the word.
    Ex: play, sleep, cook, etc.
    2. Stem : - the form of a word that inflection get added onto.
    - are just bases when you are talking about inflectional changes (-ed, _ing, -s, etc.).
    Ex: playing => play(stem)
    3. Base : any part of a word that you can add inflection to, or that you can add prefixes/suffixes
    that change the meaning/part of speech.
    Ex: dislike => like(bases)
    All roots are bases because they are the smallest chunk that stays the same despite addirion. And, not all bases are roots though, because sometimes the root+inflection or root+derivation goes on to take additional changes.

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  139. Name: Wiwin saputra
    Class: C/IV
    NIM: 16020227

    1. Root is the part of a word that cannot be changed, and when added to creates different forms of the word:

    "Walk" is a root, and can be changed in many ways: walking, walked, walker, walkie-talkie, sidewalk, walk-light, walks etc. You will never have a word related to walking where the "walk" part gets changed, so it is a root.

    2. Stem is the form of a word that inflections get added onto. Most of the time this will be the root. "Walk" is the form that all the inflections (grammar-affecting changes) gets added to, when you add ~ing to it, it turns into a progressive verb or a gerund. ~ed turns it perfect. ~s makes it a plural noun, or makes it agree with a singular subject. Ex: friend = friends

    3. A base is any part of a word that you can add inflections to, or that you can add prefixes/suffixes that change the meaning/part of speech. So "walk" is also a base, because it can have inflections (walking) and can be turned into different words (walker is a noun). Walker is also a base, because you can modify it inflectionally (walkers is plural), and because it can have things added to derive new words (dog-walker).

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  140. Nama : Regita
    Kelas : C/IV
    Nim :16020193

    Root
    A root is a form which is not further analysable, either in terms of derivational or inflectional morphology. It is that part of word-form that remains when all inflectional and derivational affixes have been removed. A root is the basic part always present in a lexeme. In the form ‘untouchables’ the root is ‘touch’, to which first the suffix ‘-able’, then the prefix ‘un-‘ and finally the suffix ‘-s’ have been added. In a compound word like ‘wheelchair’ there are two roots, ‘wheel’ and ‘chair’.

    Example:

    unhappy, root : happy

    Stem

    A stem is of concern only when dealing with inflectional morphology.
    In the form ‘untouchables’ the stem is ‘untouchable’, although in the form ‘touched’ the stem is ‘touch’; in the form ‘wheelchairs’ the stem is ‘wheelchair’, even though the stem contains two roots.

    Example:

    Bag (root) – bag(s) = bags (steam)

    Play (root) – play(er)(base)+(s) = players (steam)

    Base

    A base is any form to which affixes of any kind can be added. This means that any root or any stem can be termed a base, but the set of bases is not exhausted by the union of the set of roots and the set of stems: a derivationally analysable form to which derivational affixes are added can only be referred to as a base. That is, ‘touchable’ can act as a base for prefixation to give ‘untouchable’, but in this process ‘touchable’ could not be referred to as a root because it is analysable in terms of derivational morphology, nor as a stem since it is not the adding of inflectional affixes which is in question.

    Example:
    Like (root) + -dis = dislike(base)+ -ed (inflectional suffixes) = disliked( steam).

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  141. Nama : Sulis tia ningsih
    Nim : 16020219
    Kelas: C/IV
    1.Root is a word that does not have a prefix in front of the word or a suffix at the end of the word. The root word is the primary lexical unit of a word , and of a word family (root is then called base word).
    => Example :
    chatters has the inflectional root or lemma chatter , but the lexical root chat .

    2.Stem is that part of a word that is in existence before any inflectional affixes have been added. Inflection is discussed in section.

    => For example:
    Noun stem Plural
    Cat -s
    Worker -s

    3.Base is any unit whatsoever to which affixes of any kind can be added. The affixes attached to a base may be inflectional affixes selected for syntactic reasons or derivational affixes which alter the meaning or grammatical category of the base. An unadorned root like boy can be a base since it can have attached to it inflectional affixes like -s to form the plural boys or derivational affixes like -ish to tum the noun boy into the adjective boyish. In other words, all roots are bases. Bases are called stems only in the context of inflectional morphology.

    => Example :
    faith, faithful, booksho

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  142. Nama : Winda Hermawati
    Nim : 16020225
    Kelas : C/IV
    1.) ROOT is the original form of a word, without any affix or can be the root is the base word.
    Example:likes,dislike=Like
    Like is the root of dislike and likes.
    2.) STEM is a word which was given particular affix but does not change the type of word. root is a noun, then stem is a noun if the root adjective then stem adjective.
    Example:
    Friend:friends(true)
    friend is the root form of the noun, the stem that is used is a noun that friends
    Friend:friendly(wrong)
    friend is a noun while the friendly is an adjective. so dissimilar!
    3.) BASE all root and stem is the base but not all base can become root and stem.
    determine root and steam.
    untouchable:
    root:touchable
    Stem:untouchable
    Because both are adjectives . Remember!root and stem are the words of the same type

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    Replies
    1. Name : Poppy Ayu Elvandari
      NIM : 16020188
      Class : C/IV

      #ROOT is the past of a word that can't be changed and when added to creates different forms of the word. And the part of word that still exist after all derivational and infectional afixes is deleted.
      Example:
      Walking, walker, walked, sidewalk, etc.

      #STEM is part of the remaining forms of words when all inflection affixes removed.
      Example:
      Plays > Play is a stem
      Uncomfortables > Uncomfortable is a stem

      #BASE are part of the words related to the form of infections and can add prefixes or suffixes.
      Example:
      Player > Play is a base
      Uncomfortable > Comfortable is a base

      Delete
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  145. Nama : SERLI
    Nim : 16020207
    Kelas : C/IV

    1. ROOT
    What is the root ?? Hearing the root word certainly imagined in our minds that the roots , But we are here to discuss not discuss the said plant. To understand it directly to the examples

    likes, dislike, disliked = like
    explanation: like is the root of likes, dislike and disliked

    That means the root of a word merupakaan original form without any additive.

    2. STEM
    Steam is a word which was given particular additive but does not change the kind words. For example, the root is a noun then steamnya should be a noun, if the root adjective then steam also adjective .Here
    example

    friend = friends (right)
    explanation: friend is the root form of the noun it stemnya also a noun that friends

    friend = user (one)
    explanation: friend is friendly whereas the noun is an adjective so dissimilar

    3. BASE
    All the root and the stem is the base but not all of the base may be the root and stem. example

    unfriendly = friend / user / unfriend
    explanation: its base bis friend, friendly or unfriend

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  146. Name : SRI AYUNINGTIAS
    Nim : 16020215
    Class : C/IV

    Assalamualaikum Wr. Wb.

    1. Root is the original form of word without any affix.
    Examples :
    Acromony : acro
    Carnivrous : carn
    Luminary : lum
    Ambulant, amble, ambulate : ambul
    Multiple, multyfaceted, multilingual : multi
    Normality : normal

    2. Stem is a word that is affixed does not change the word.
    Examples :
    Writing : ing ( progressive )
    Walked : ed ( suffix )
    Unlike : un ( prefix )

    3. Base that root and stem are base but not all base can be root and stem.
    Examples :
    Walk is inflections (walking) and can be turned into different words (walker is a noun). Walker is also a base, because you can modify it inflectionally (walkers is plural), and because it can have things added to derive new words (dog walker).

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  148. Name: Suci Prawiranti
    NIM: 16020216
    Class: C/IV

    1. Root is like a stem in constituting but the term refers only to morphologically simple unit.
    Example :
    Disagree, disagreement : agree
    Ambulant, amble, ambulate : ambul

    2. Stem is a word which was given particular additive but doesn't change the kind words.
    Example :
    Bag (root) – bag(s) = bags (steam)
    Play (root) – play(er)(base)+(s) = players (steam)

    3. Base is any part of a word that you can add inflection to, or that you can add prefixes/suffixes that change the meaning/part of speech.
    Example:
    “Walk” is also base, because it can have inflection (walking) and can be turned into different word (walker is a noun). Walker is also a base, because you can modify it inflectionally (walker is plural), and because it can have things added to drive new words (dog walker).

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  149. Name:pipin alpianti
    Class:C/IV
    Nim:16020187

    1.ROOT
    What is the root ?? Hearing the root word certainly imagined in our minds that the roots .. But we are here to discuss not discuss the said plant. To understand it directly to the examples

    likes, dislike, disliked = like
    explanation: like is the root of likes, dislike and disliked

    That means the root of a word is original form without any additive.


    2. STEM
    Steam is a word which was given particular additive but does not change the kind words. For example, the root is a noun then steamnya should be a noun, if the root adjective then steam also adjective .Here
    example

    friend = friends (right)
    explanation: friend is the root form of the noun it stemnya also a noun that friends
    friend = user (one)
    explanation: friend is friendly whereas the noun is an adjective so dissimilar.

    3.BASE
    I any unit to which affixes of any kind derivational/lexical affixes can be added. All roots are bases. Bases are called steams only in the context of inflectional morphology.
    Example :
    Like (root) + -dis = dislike(base)+ -ed (inflectional suffixes) = disliked( steam)
    It means that stem ‘disliked’ come from base ‘dislike’.

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  150. Nama :Sukmawati Syam
    Nim :16020217
    Kelas:IV/C

    Root is the term to refer to from of said that can not be subdivide, can not be analysed again, no addition affixes again.
    Example:dislike, likes, disliked: like
    Like is the root of likes, dislike and dislikes

    Stem is part of said before the given additional affixes inflection.
    Example :
    Friend : friends
    Friend is the form of the noun

    Base is all the root and the stem is the base but not all of the base may be the root and stem.
    Example:
    Unfriendly : friend / user / unfriend
    Its base can be friend, friendly or unfriendly.


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  152. Name:Windari Nurul Pratiwi Sofyan
    Nim:16020226
    Class:IV/C

    1. Root
    A root word is a word or part of a word which can form the basis of new words, through the addition of prefixes and suffixes. Understanding the meanings of common word roots can therefore help you work out the meanings of new words when you come across them.
    Examples:
    React, reaction, acting = act
    Automatic, autocrat = auto
    Benefactor, benevolent = bene
    Reject, eject, inject = ject

    2. Stem
    A stem is of concern only when dealing with inflectional morphology.
    Examples:
    In the form ‘untouchables’ the stem is ‘untouchable’, although in the form ‘touched’ the stem is ‘touch’; in the form ‘wheelchairs’ the stem is ‘wheelchair’, even though the stem contains two roots.

    3. Base
    A base is the form of a word to which prefixes and suffixes can be added to create new words.
    Example:
    Instruct is the base for forming instruction, instructor, and reinstruct. Also called a root or stem.

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  153. Name:Umi kalsum
    Nim:16020224
    Class:IV/C

    1. Root
    A root is the part of a word that cannot be changed, and when added to creates different forms of the word:
    Examples:
    1. "Walk" is a root, and can be changed in many ways: walking, walked, walker, walkie-talkie, sidewalk, walk-light, walks etc. You will never have a word related to walking where the "walk" part gets changed, so it is a root.
    2. complete, replete, expletive: these all have the root "plete", which happens to not be a word on its own.

    2. Stem
    A stem is the form of a word that inflections get added onto. Most of the time this will be the root.
    Examples:
    understandables, the stem is understandable
    Walked, the stem is walk.

    3. Base
    A base is any part of a word that you can add inflections to, or that you can add prefixes/suffixes that change the meaning/part of speech.
    Example:
    "walk" is also a base, because it can have inflections (walking) and can be turned into different words (walker is a noun).

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  154. Name:Rosdiana
    Nim:16020201
    Class: IV/C

    1. Root
    Root is the irreducible core of a word, with absolutely nothing else attached to it. Roots can be free morpheme or a word element which the other new words grow, usually through addition prefixes and suffixes.

    Example : unhappy, root : happy.

    2. Steam
    Steam is a word element to which grammatical or inflectional suffixes can be added. Every word that end with inflectional suffixes, we called it ‘steam’.
    Example:
    Bag (root) – bag(s) = bags (steam)

    Play (root) – play(er)(base)+(s) = players (steam)

    3. Base
    Base I any unit to which affixes of any kind derivational/lexical affixes can be added. All roots are bases. Bases are called steams only in the context of inflectional morphology.

    Example :
    Like (root) + -dis = dislike(base)+ -ed (inflectional suffixes) = disliked( steam)

    It means that stem ‘disliked’ come from base ‘dislike’

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  155. Name:Siska Mira Ria
    Class:IV/C

    1. Root
    A root is the irreducible core of a word, with absolutely nothing else attached to it. It is the part that is always present, possibly with some modification, in the various manifestations of a lexeme.
    Example:
    walk is a root and it appears in the set of word-forms that instantiate the lexeme WALK such as walk, walks, walking.
    2. Stem
    The stem is that part of a word that is in existence before any inflectional affixes have been added. Inflection is discussed in section.
    Example:
    The verbs tie and untie are both stems.
    The inflectional third person singular suffix -s may be added to the stems to form ties and unties.
    3. Base
    A base is any unit whatsoever to which affixes of any kind can be added. The affixes attached to a base may be inflectional affixes selected for syntactic reasons or derivational affixewhichltealter meaning or grammatical category of the base.
    Example:
    "walk" is also a base, because it can have inflections (walking) and can be turned into different words (walker is a noun). Walker is also a base, because you can modify it inflectionally (walkers is plural), and because it can have things added to derive new words (dog-walker).

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  156. Name:Tomy setiawan
    Nim :16020223
    Class : IV/C


    A root is the part of a word that cannot be changed, and when added to creates different forms of the word:

    "Walk" is a root, and can be changed in many ways: walking, walked, walker, walkie-talkie, sidewalk, walk-light, walks etc. You will never have a word related to walking where the "walk" part gets changed, so it is a root.

    A stem is the form of a word that inflections get added onto. Most of the time this will be the root. "Walk" is the form that all the inflections (grammar-affecting changes) gets added to, when you add ~ing to it, it turns into a progressive verb or a gerund.

    A base is any part of a word that you can add inflections to, or that you can add prefixes/suffixes that change the meaning/part of speech.

    Example:
    walk" is also a base, because it can have inflections (walking) and can be turned into different words (walker is a noun).

    ReplyDelete
  157. Name: RIFKI
    MIN : 16020198
    Class : C / IV

    1.Root is part of the words related to the form of derivational and inflectional. Root can be changed and analyze more.
    Example:
    "Account"
    can be changed in many ways:
    accounts,accounting,accounterments,accounted,accountant,accountany,accountable and accontability.

    2.Stem is part of the words related to form of inflection. Stem can be complex word and consists of two roots.
    Example:
    "Accounted"
    -accont=root
    -ed=stem

    3.Bases are part of the words related to the form of inflections and can add prefixes or suffixes. Not all bases can be a root, but root can be bases and stem.
    Example:
    "Accounted"=base of unaccounted

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  158. Name : Kiki Nurul Safitri
    Nim : 16020162
    Steam, Base, and Root
    1.Root
    Root is the irreducible core of a word, with absolutely nothing else attached to it. Roots can be free morpheme or a word element which the other new words grow, usually through addition prefixes and suffixes.

    Example : unhappy, root : happy.

    2.Steam
    Steam is a word element to which grammatical or inflectional suffixes can be added. Every word that end with inflectional suffixes, we called it ‘steam’.

    Inflectional suffixes :

    –s (plural)
    –s (possessive)
    –s (third singular person)
    –ed (past tense)
    –en (past participle)
    –ing (present participle)
    –er (comparative)
    –est (superlative)
    Example :

    Bag (root) – bag(s) = bags (steam)

    Play (root) – play(er)(base)+(s) = players (steam)





    3.Base
    Base I any unit to which affixes of any kind derivational/lexical affixes can be added. All roots are bases. Bases are called steams only in the context of inflectional morphology.
    Example :
    Like (root) + -dis = dislike(base)+ -ed (inflectional suffixes) = disliked( steam)
    It means that stem ‘disliked’ come from base ‘dislike’
    Affixes
    Affixes is a morpheme (bound morpheme) which only occurs when attached to some other morphemes such as a root, steam or base. There are three kinds of affixes which are as follow :

    Prefix is an affix attached before a root, steam or base, like : re-,un-, -in, etc.
    Suffixe is an affix attached after a root, steam, base, like : -ly, -er, -ist, -s, -ing, and –ed.
    Infix ia an affix inserted into the root itself.
    Example :

    Write(root)+ (re-) = rewrite(base)+ (-e

    ReplyDelete
  159. Name : sulastri wijayanti
    Nim. : 16020218
    Class : C/VI

    A root is the part of a word that cannot be changed, and when added to creates different forms of the word:

    "Walk" is a root, and can be changed in many ways: walking, walked, walker, walkie-talkie, sidewalk, walk-light, walks etc. You will never have a word related to walking where the "walk" part gets changed, so it is a root.

    Most of the time the root forms a word on its own, but sometimes they do not.
    complete, replete, expletive: these all have the root "plete", which happens to not be a word on its own.


    A stem is the form of a word that inflections get added onto. Most of the time this will be the root. "Walk" is the form that all the inflections (grammar-affecting changes) gets added to, when you add ~ing to it, it turns into a progressive verb or a gerund. ~ed turns it perfect. ~s makes it a plural noun, or makes it agree with a singular subject.


    A base is any part of a word that you can add inflections to, or that you can add prefixes/suffixes that change the meaning/part of speech. So "walk" is also a base, because it can have inflections (walking) and can be turned into different words (walker is a noun). Walker is also a base, because you can modify it inflectionally (walkers is plural), and because it can have things added to derive new words (dog-walker).

    ReplyDelete
  160. Name :Muh.Yakub Lubis
    Nim :16020173
    Class:B/IV

    1.) ROOT is the original form of a word, without any affix or can be the root is the base word.
    Example:likes,dislike=Like
    Like is the root of dislike and likes.
    2.) STEM is a word which was given particular affix but does not change the type of word. root is a noun, then stem is a noun if the root adjective then stem adjective.
    Example:
    Friend:friends(true)
    friend is the root form of the noun, the stem that is used is a noun that friends
    Friend:friendly(wrong)
    friend is a noun while the friendly is an adjective. so dissimilar!
    3.) BASE all root and stem is the base but not all base can become root and stem.
    determine root and steam.
    untouchable:
    root:touchable
    Stem:untouchable
    Because both are adjectives . Remember!root and stem are the words of the same type

    ReplyDelete
  161. Nama : serli lusianti
    Kelas : IV/C
    Nim : 16020208
    1.) ROOT is the original form of a word, without any affix or can be the root is the base word.
    Example:likes,dislike=Like
    Like is the root of dislike and likes.
    2.) STEM is a word which was given particular affix but does not change the type of word. root is a noun, then stem is a noun if the root adjective then stem adjective.
    Example:
    Friend:friends(true)
    friend is the root form of the noun, the stem that is used is a noun that friends
    Friend:friendly(wrong)
    friend is a noun while the friendly is an adjective. so dissimilar!
    3.) BASE all root and stem is the base but not all base can become root and stem.
    determine root and steam.
    untouchable:
    root:touchable
    Stem:untouchable
    Because both are adjectives . Remember!root and stem are the words of the same type

    Reply

    ReplyDelete
  162. Nama : serli lusianti
    Kelas : IV/C
    Nim : 16020208
    1.) ROOT is the original form of a word, without any affix or can be the root is the base word.
    Example:likes,dislike=Like
    Like is the root of dislike and likes.
    2.) STEM is a word which was given particular affix but does not change the type of word. root is a noun, then stem is a noun if the root adjective then stem adjective.
    Example:
    Friend:friends(true)
    friend is the root form of the noun, the stem that is used is a noun that friends
    Friend:friendly(wrong)
    friend is a noun while the friendly is an adjective. so dissimilar!
    3.) BASE all root and stem is the base but not all base can become root and stem.
    determine root and steam.
    untouchable:
    root:touchable
    Stem:untouchable
    Because both are adjectives . Remember!root and stem are the words of the same type

    Reply

    ReplyDelete
  163. NAME : DESRIANY
    NIM : 16020128
    CLASS: A

    ROOT

    Root is the smallest meaning part of a word
    Example: dis[like] and dis[like]d, like is the root of dislike and disliked

    STEAM

    Steam is a word which was given particular additive but does not change the kind words. For example, the root is a noun then steamnya should be a noun, if the root adjective then steam also adjective .Here
    example

    friend = friends (right)
    explanation: friend is the root form of the noun it stemnya also a noun that friends

    friend = user (one)
    explanation: friend is friendly whereas the noun is an adjective so dissimilar

    BASE

    All the root and the stem is the base but not all of the base may be the root and stem. example

    unfriendly = friend / user / unfriend
    explanation: its base bis friend, friendly or unfriend

    Reply

    ReplyDelete
  164. Nama : Andi nurfadillah putri
    Nim : 16020115
    Kelas: A/IV
    1. ROOTT
    root is the original form of a word without any increment.

    likes, dislike, disliked = like
    explanation: like is the root of likes, dislike and disliked.



    2. STEM
    Stem is a word given a certain affix but does not change the type of word. For example root is a noun then steam should be a noun, if root adjectives then steam is also an adjective
    example :

    friend = friends (true)
    explanation: friend is root in the form of a noun then the stem is also a noun that is friends

    friend = friendly (wrong)
    explanation: friend is a noun whereas friendly is an adjective so it is not the same

    3. BASE
    All root and stem are base but not all base can be root and stem. example

    unfriendly = friend / friendly / unfriend
    explanation: its base can be friend, friendly or unfriend

    >>> The example specifies the root and stem of a base, for example

    Determine the root and steam of the word UNTOUCHABLE !!!

    Discussion:
    root = touchable
    stem = untouchable
    reason: because both are adjectives, remember root and steam are words of the same type.

    ReplyDelete
  165. Ayu Rahmah Susanti
    Nim:16020123
    Class:A/IV

    Root is part of the words related to the form of derivational and inflectional.Root can be change and analyze more.
    Example:Likes,dislike,disliked,like

    Stem is part of the words related to the form of infkection.Stem can be complex word and consist two roots.
    Example:bag(root)bag(s)=(stem)

    Bases are part of the words related to the form of inflection and can add preffix or suffixer.
    Example: unfriendly / friend / friendly / unfriend

    ReplyDelete
  166. Name: Fira Nadia Aulia
    Class: IV/A
    ID number: 16020137

    The explanation above that telling us about term that used in literatur to show the part of word that has left when all affixes is missed, which are root, stem, and bases.

    A root is like a stem in constituting the core of the word to which other pieces attach, but the term refers only to morphologically simple units. For example, disagree is the stem of disagreement, because it is the base to which -ment attaches, but agree is the root. Taking disagree now, agree is both the stem to which dis- attaches and the root of the entire word.
    STEM 
    A stem is a base unit to which another morphological piece is attached. The stem can be simple, made up of only one part, or complex, itself made up of more than one piece. Here it is best to consider consider a simple stem. Although it consists historically of more than one part, most present-day speakers would treat it as an unanalyzable form. We could also call consider the root.
    BASE
    A base is any unit whatsoever to which affixes of any kind can be added. The affixes attached to a base may be inflectional affixes selected for syntactic reasons or derivational affixes which alter the meaning or grammatical category of the base. An unadorned root like boy can be a base since it can have attached to it inflectional affixes like -s to form the plural boys or derivational affixes like -ish to tum the noun boy into the adjective boyish. In other words, all roots are bases. Bases are called stems only in the context of inflectional morphology. 

    ReplyDelete
  167. In Morphological Analysis we extract the root word and add additional information like tense aspects and modality. But, in most of the applications we do not require so much information. So, we resolve to some lighter applications a lemmatizer or a stemmer. A lemmatizer would remove the infections (in your case affixes) and would give you a proper word while a stemmer may remove the affixes and would not provide you with a proper word. For example, lets take a word 'features'. A lemmatizer would give you 'feature' (a complete word making some sense, this called a lemma) while a stemmer may give you 'featur '. it might seem that lemmatizers are more useful then stemmers, but it is not true. It depends what you wish to achieve, what are you developing.
    So, in morphological analysis you get root + affixes, a lemmatizer gives you a complete word making sense (lemma) which removes affixes and add some info to make it a proper dictionary word. A stemmer gives you a stem (after removing affixes) which may or may not resort to a dictionary word.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Nyoman Indah Artini (170220050)

      In Morphological Analysis we extract the root word and add additional information like tense aspects and modality. But, in most of the applications we do not require so much information. So, we resolve to some lighter applications a lemmatizer or a stemmer. A lemmatizer would remove the infections (in your case affixes) and would give you a proper word while a stemmer may remove the affixes and would not provide you with a proper word. For example, lets take a word 'features'. A lemmatizer would give you 'feature' (a complete word making some sense, this called a lemma) while a stemmer may give you 'featur '. it might seem that lemmatizers are more useful then stemmers, but it is not true. It depends what you wish to achieve, what are you developing.
      So, in morphological analysis you get root + affixes, a lemmatizer gives you a complete word making sense (lemma) which removes affixes and add some info to make it a proper dictionary word. A stemmer gives you a stem (after removing affixes) which may or may not resort to a dictionary word.

      Delete
  168. Name : Risky Ayu Cahyani
    SIN : 180220160
    Class : IV/A

    1. ROOT
    Root is the original form of a word without any affixes. Example:

    likes, dislike, disliked = like
    explanation: like is the root of likes, dislike and disliked


    2. STEM
    Steam is a word given a certain affix but does not change the type of word. For example, root is a noun, steam must be a noun, if root is an adjective, steam is also an adjective. Example

    friend = friends (right)
    Explanation: friend is root in the form of a noun, the stem is also a noun, friends

    friend = friendly (wrong)
    explanation: friend is a noun while friendly is an adjective so it's not the same

    3. BASE
    All root and stem are base but not all base can be root and stem. example

    unfriendly = friend / friendly / unfriend
    explanation: the base is bus friend, friendly or unfriend

    >>> Examples determine the root and stem of a base, for example
    Determine the root and steam of the word UNTOUCHABLE !!!

    Answer:
    root = touchable
    stem = untouchable
    reason: because both are adjectives

    ReplyDelete
  169. Amelia Sulistiani
    180210086
    Class A
    1. Root
    Root is the irreducible core of a word, with absolutely nothing else attached to it. Roots can be free morphemes and bound morphemes. Roots which are capable of standing independently are free morphemes while bound morphemes are roots which are incapable of occurring in isolation (Katamba, 1994: 41). The free morphemes include lexical morphemes and function words. Nouns, adjectives, verbs, prepositions and adverbs are parts of lexical morphemes, and articles, demonstratives, pronouns and conjunctions are parts of function words. Although roots can be free morphemes, not all roots are free. Thus, the kinds of roots incapable of occurring in isolation are called bound morphemes. In English, the example of the morphemes is latinate affixes like -mit (as in permit, remit, commit, admit), -ceive (as in perceive, receive, conceive), pred- (as in predator, predatory, predation, depredate) and sed- (as in sedan, sedate, sedentary, sediment).
    2.Stems
    Stem is part of word that is in existence before any inflectional affixes.
    Example: cats -> stem : cat, inflectional affix: -s workers -> stem: worker, inflectional: -s E Bases
    3. Base
    is any unit whatsoever to which affixes of any kind, inflectional affixes and derivational affixes, can be added. All roots are bases. Bases are called stems only in the context of inflectional morphology.
    Example: Boys-> root: boy, stem: boy, base:boy, inflectional affix: -s

    ReplyDelete
  170. Name : Iis Istiqomah
    Nim : 180210114
    Class : A/IV

    -Definition Root
    A root is that part of the word which remains after all the affixes have been removed. A root in other words, cannot be analyzed further either in terms of inflectional or in terms of derivational morphology. Examples:

    Words Roots
    cigarettes cigar

    A root cannot be further analyzed without total loss of identity. As shown above, a root is that part of the word left when all the affixes are removed.

    -Definition Stem
    A stem is that part of a word which remains after all the inflexional affixes have been taken away. A stem cannot be analyzed in terms of inflexional affixes but it can in many cases be analyzed in terms of derivational affixes. Below are some examples of stems.

    Words Stems
    cigarettes cigarette

    -Definition Base
    Base word is the word to which a morphological operation applies. It is any form to which an affix of any kind has been added. Below are some examples:
    Cigar is root and base for cigarette and cigarette is the base for cigarettes.

    ReplyDelete
  171. Name : Mayang Aprilya
    Nim : 180230131
    IV/B

    - Root ( Akar )
    • Root is the part of word that still exist after all derivational and inflectional afixes is deleted .
    • Root is the form that can’t analyzed more are there in derivational or inflection term .
    - Stem ( Batang )
    • Stem is the form of a word that unflections get added onto .
    - Base ( Dasar )
    • Base is any part of a word that you can add inflection to or that you can add prefixes/suffixes that change the meaning/part of speech

    Example :
    Wached -> ( Watch )
    It is root , stem and also base
    Unforgetable -> ( forgetable )
    It is base , and not of root or stem
    Memorizing -> ( Memorize )
    It is root , stem and also base
    Cooks -> ( Cook ) for 3rd singular person
    It is root , stem and also base
    Computerparts -> ( Computerpart )
    It is stem and base but not of root
    Reproduced -> ( Reproduce )
    It is stem and root but not of root

    ReplyDelete
  172. Name: Ayu Angraeni
    Class : A/IV
    NIM : 180220100

    A root is the irreducible core of a word, with absolutely nothing else attached to it. It is the part that is always present, possibly with some modification, in the various manifestations of a lexeme. For example, walk is a root and it appears in the set of word-forms that instantiate the lexeme WALK such as walk, walks, walking and walked. The only situation where this is not true is when suppletion takes place. 

    The stem is that part of a word that is in existence before any inflectional affixes have been added. Inflection is discussed in section. For example:
    Noun stem Plural
    Cat -s
    Worker -s
    For the moment a few examples should suffice: In the word-form cats, the plural inflectional suffix -s is attached to the simple stem cat, which is a bare root, i.e. the irreducible core of the word. In workers the same inflectional -s suffix comes after a slightly more complex stem consisting of the root work plus the suffix -er which is used to form nouns from verbs.

    A base is any unit whatsoever to which affixes of any kind can be added. The affixes attached to a base may be inflectional affixes selected for syntactic reasons or derivational affixes which alter the meaning or grammatical category of the base. An unadorned root like boy can be a base since it can have attached to it inflectional affixes like -s to form the plural boys or derivational affixes like -ish to tum the noun boy into the adjective boyish. In other words, all roots are bases. Bases are called stems only in the context of inflectional morphology. Example: faith, faithful, booksho.

    ReplyDelete
  173. Name : Eka Safitri
    Nim : 180210107
    Clas : A/IV

    1.ROOT
    Root is the original form of a word without any affix.
    Example

    Likes, dislike, disliked= like
    Explanation:Like is the root of likes, dislike and disliked

    2.STEM
    Steam is a word given a certain affix but does not change the type of word. For example root is a noun then steam must be a noun, if root is an adjective then steam is also an adjective
    example

    friend = friends (right)
    Explanation: friend is root in the form of a noun, the stem is also a noun, friends

    friend = friendly (wrong)
    explanation: friend is a noun while friendly is an adjective so it's not the same

    3.BASE
    Base is the form that forms the basic of the morphological process, where affixes can be added, both inflectional and derivational affiex. All root and stem are base but not all base can be root and stem.
    Example

    unfriendly = friend / friendly / unfriend
    explanation: the base is bus friend, friendly or unfriend

    Determine the root and steam of the word
    Unforgetable
    Root : Forgetable
    Steam: Unforgetable
    Reason:Because both are adjectives, remember root and steam are words of the same type.

    ReplyDelete
  174. Name : Eka Safitri
    Nim : 180210107
    Clas : A/IV

    1.ROOT
    Root is the original form of a word without any affix.
    Example

    Likes, dislike, disliked= like
    Explanation:Like is the root of likes, dislike and disliked

    2.STEM
    Steam is a word given a certain affix but does not change the type of word. For example root is a noun then steam must be a noun, if root is an adjective then steam is also an adjective
    example

    friend = friends (right)
    Explanation: friend is root in the form of a noun, the stem is also a noun, friends

    friend = friendly (wrong)
    explanation: friend is a noun while friendly is an adjective so it's not the same

    3.BASE
    Base is the form that forms the basic of the morphological process, where affixes can be added, both inflectional and derivational affiex. All root and stem are base but not all base can be root and stem.
    Example

    unfriendly = friend / friendly / unfriend
    explanation: the base is bus friend, friendly or unfriend

    Determine the root and steam of the word
    Unforgetable
    Root : Forgetable
    Steam: Unforgetable
    Reason:Because both are adjectives, remember root and steam are words of the same type.

    ReplyDelete
  175. Name : Rina Angriani
    NIM : 180220157
    Class : A/IV

    1. Root
    Root is the irreducible core of a word, with absolutely nothing else attached to it.root is the original form of a word without any affixes.
    For example : bag -> bags (bag is the root which is the root of the bags)

    2.stem
    Stem is the form of a word that inflections get added onto. stem is a form of words that only relates to inflection.
    For example : smallest - (small) it is root and also stem

    A note. if the root is an adjective the stem is also an adjective.

    3. Base
    Base is any part of a word that you can add inflection to or that you can add prefixes/suffixes that change the meaning/part of speech.
    For example : adjusted (base) of unadjusted


    Examples of words that include root, stem, and bases, namely:
    Play (Root)
    Player (base)
    Players (stem)

    ReplyDelete
  176. Name: Silvi khaerunnisa
    Nim: 180230166
    Class: B/IV

    1.ROOT

    meaning root is the original form of a word without any affix.

    2. STEM
    Steam is a word given a certain affix but does not change the type of word. For example, root is a noun, steam must be a noun, if root is an adjective, steam is also an adjective.

    3.BASE
    All root and stem are base but not all base can be root and stem.

    Example:
    Play (Root)
    Player (base)
    Players (stem)

    ReplyDelete
  177. Name : Yuliana
    Nim. : 180230183
    Class: IV B

    # root
    Root is the part of word that still exist after all derivational and inflectional afixes is deleted.
    Example :
    :likes, dislike, disliked = like
    explanation: like is the root of likes, dislike and disliked

    # stem
    Stem is the form of a word that inflectional get added into consist of two roots.
    Example :
    friend = friends (right)
    explanation: friend is the root form of the noun it stemnya also a noun that friends

    # Base
    Base is any part of a word that you can add inflectional to or that you can add prefix/saffix that part of speech
    Example :
    unfriendly = friend / user / unfriend
    explanation: its base bis friend, friendly or unfriend

    ReplyDelete
  178. Name:arlian afsari
    Class: B/IV
    NIM: 180230095

    - Root ( Akar )
    • Root is the part of word that still exist after all derivational and inflectional afixes is deleted .
    • Root is the form that can’t analyzed more are there in derivational or inflection term .
    - Stem ( Batang )
    • Stem is the form of a word that unflections get added onto .
    - Base ( Dasar )
    • Base is any part of a word that you can add inflection to or that you can add prefixes/suffixes that change the meaning/part of speech

    Example
    Unsystematic -> systematic
    It is only ase not root and stem
    Absolutely -> absolute
    It is root and ase but not stem
    Disliked -> dislike
    It is stem and base but not root

    ReplyDelete
  179. Name : Sri Mitha Fitriani
    NIM : 180220170
    Class : A/IV

    Taken from: Bauer, Laurie (1983:20-21): English word-formation. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
    ‘Root’, ‘stem’ and ‘base’ are all terms used in the literature to designate that part of a word that remains when all affixes have been removed.

    -A root is a form which is not further analysable, either in terms of derivational or inflectional morphology. It is that part of word-form that remains when all inflectional and derivational affixes have been removed. A root is the basic part always present in a lexeme. In the form ‘untouchables’ the root is ‘touch’, to which first the suffix ‘-able’, then the prefix ‘un-‘ and finally the suffix ‘-s’ have been added. In a compound word like ‘wheelchair’ there are two roots, ‘wheel’ and ‘chair’.

    -A stem is of concern only when dealing with inflectional morphology.
    In the form ‘untouchables’ the stem is ‘untouchable’, although in the form ‘touched’ the stem is ‘touch’; in the form ‘wheelchairs’ the stem is ‘wheelchair’, even though the stem contains two roots.

    -A base is any form to which affixes of any kind can be added. This means that any root or any stem can be termed a base, but the set of bases is not exhausted by the union of the set of roots and the set of stems: a derivationally analysable form to which derivational affixes are added can only be referred to as a base. That is, ‘touchable’ can act as a base for prefixation to give ‘untouchable’, but in this process ‘touchable’ could not be referred to as a root because it is analysable in terms of derivational morphology, nor as a stem since it is not the adding of inflectional affixes which is in question.

    ReplyDelete
  180. Name : Nadya sasqiyah Shafira
    Nim : 180220141
    Class : 4/a
    1. root
    Is it root? To hear root is going to conjure up in our minds, roots. But we're here to talk about words, not plants. He likes it in person, likes, likes
    Like is the root of likes, dislikes and hobbies that means root represents the original form of a word without a pound of anything
    2. stem
    Steam is a word which appears to be given a particular strain but doesn't change the type of word. For example, root isa noun, then the steak has to be a noun, if root adjective, then steam is also a adjective
    Examples of her friend
    The explanation: friend is a root with a noun. So the stamp is also a noun. Which is friends friend friendly.
    Explanation: friend is a noun and friendly is an adjective, so it's not like
    3. base
    All root and stem are bases but not all bases can be root and stem. Consider consider consider friend. Friendly
    Explanation: the base

    ReplyDelete
  181. Name : Nurul Hafifah
    Nim : 180210153
    Class : IV/A

    Bases, stems, and roots are the main components of words, just like cells, atoms, and protons are the main components of matter.

    In linguistics, the words "roots" is the core of the word. It is the morpheme that comprises the most important part of the word. It is also the primary unit of the family of the same word. Keep in mind that the root is mono-morphemic, or made of just one "chunk", or morpheme. Without the root, the word would not have any meaning. If you take the root away, all that you have left is affixes either before or after it. Such affixes do not have a lexical meaning on their own.

    An example of a root is the word "act".

    Now let's look at what is a stem and a base and apply them to the root "act" so that you can see how they differ and interconnect to transform a lexical word altogether.

    The stem occurs after affixes have been added to the root, for example:

    Re-act

    Re-act-ion

    Hence a stem is a form to which affixes (prefixes or suffixes) have been added. It is important to differentiate it from a root, because the root alone cannot be applied in discourse, whereas the stem exists precisely to be applied to discourse.

    A base is the same as a root except that the root has no lexical meaning while the base does: "to act" is the infinitive of "act" and is structured with the base "act". In many words in our language, a word can be all three: root, base, and stem: "deer". The difference in their names lies on the way that they are applied during discourse (stem, base) and whether, on their own, they have any lexical meaning (stem, base) or no lexical meaning whatsoever (root).

    An example of root, base and stem joined together is the word "refrigerator"

    Latin root frīgerāre --> root; no meaning in English on its own; requires a change in spelling to affix suffixes

    refrigerāre --> Latin prefix + root, with no meaning in English of its own yet

    re- + friger + -ate + -tor--> prefix + root + suffixes that now produce lexical meaning = stem; spelling changes are required for suffixes.

    ReplyDelete
  182. Name : Hadirawati
    NIM : 180210111
    Class : A/IV

    Based on the materials about root and steam , I can conclude that :

    Root is the irreducible of a word with absolutely nothing else attached to it . Roots can be free morpheme or a word element which the other new words grow , usually through addition prefixes and suffixes.
    Example : unhappy , root : happy

    Steam is a word elementh to which grammatical or inflectional suffixes can be added . Every word that end with inflectional suffixes , we called it 'steam'
    Example :
    Bag (root)-bag(s) = bags (steam)
    Play (root)-play(er)(base)+(s)=players(steam)

    ReplyDelete
  183. Based on the explanation in class, what can i get is ;
    ROOT is the original form of word without any affixes. (Example : kick)

    STEM is the condition when a word has given a certain affixes but can called as STEM only if the inplectional affixes has eliminated (Example : kicking -> kick)

    BASE is a form of word that can add affixes to, whether it's derivational and inflectional. Therefore it can change the meaning or the part of speech (Example : kicker)

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  184. •A root is the part of a word that cannot be changed, and when added to creates different forms of the word:

    "Walk" is a root, and can be changed in many ways: walking, walked, walker, walkie-talkie, sidewalk, walk-light, walks etc. You will never have a word related to walking where the "walk" part gets changed, so it is a root.

    Most of the time the root forms a word on its own, but sometimes they do not.
    complete, replete, expletive: these all have the root "plete", which happens to not be a word on its own. (In highly inflected dlanguages such as Latin, a root is almost never a word.)

    •A stem is the form of a word that inflections get added onto. Most of the time this will be the root. "Walk" is the form that all the inflections (grammar-affecting changes) gets added to, when you add ~ing to it, it turns into a progressive verb or a gerund. ~ed turns it perfect. ~s makes it a plural noun, or makes it agree with a singular subject.

    •A base is any part of a word that you can add inflections to, or that you can add prefixes/suffixes that change the meaning/part of speech. So "walk" is also a base, because it can have inflections (walking) and can be turned into different words (walker is a noun). Walker is also a base, because you can modify it inflectionally (walkers is plural), and because it can have things added to derive new words (dog-walker).

    So all roots are bases because they are the smallest chunk that stays the same despite additions.

    Not all bases are roots though, because sometimes the root+inflection or root+derivation goes on to take additional changes. (Walker is a base, but the root is still walk).

    Stems are just bases when you are talking about inflectional changes (-ed, -ing, -s, etc.).

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  185. Name: Fesi Anggraeni
    NIS : 180220109
    Class : A/IV

    1. Root morfem
    root is a term for saying forms that are no longer dible, can't be analyzed, no more definite addition of prefix. These roots have always existed, although in various forms modified an leshem. Examples; Walk, being rootless, can emerge with forms of words, such as: walks, walking, walked.
    The form of words representing the same morfem does not necessarily have the same morfem root. , for example: forms of good and better are the same lechaeum good, but only good are phonetically good equals good.
    A lot of words have very independent roots. Independent roots are called free morphem.
    example: -man -book -tea -sweet

    2.Stem
    means part of the word prior to being given an inflexible affinity affinity extra.
    example:
    - cat (-s)
    - worker (-s)
    In the form of the word cats, the inflexion is added to the stem of cat, which is also a root. On the form of the word workers, inflexible sufics added to worker. Worker is stem, while work is root.
    3. base
    base is the form that forms the basis for morphology, where afyx can be added; Both inflexable and derivational affixes. In other words, all root is also base.Root, base, stem and fringe identification below:
    e.g: faiths frogmarched
    Faithfully bookshops
    Unfaithful window-cleaners
    Faithfulness hardships
    e.g: Afiks Afiks Root Stem Base
    Inflesional Derivasiona
    -ed un- faith faith faith
    -s -ful frog forgmarch frogmarch
    -ly march bookshop frogmarch
    -er clean windowcleaner bookshop
    -ness hard hardship window-clean
    -ship window window-cleaner
    hardship
    The above example suggests that it is quite possible to form a single word by adding afyx to a root or two. An example of two words frog and march combined into a base or stem, frog-march, and even plated. Similar, Windows and clean could be combined to form bases, Windows -clean, surfacing deriv-cleaner could be added to Windows -cleaner, so it came back to window-cleaner, and could be added to window-cleaners. The word containing more than one root is called compound word.

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  186. Name:Marhani
    Nim:180220128
    class:IV(A)

    1.Root
    Root is the irreducible core of a word, with absolutely nothing else attached to it. Roots can be free morpheme or a word element which the other new words grow, usually through addition prefixes and suffixes.

    Example : unhappy, root : happy.

    2.Steam
    Steam is a word element to which grammatical or inflectional suffixes can be added. Every word that end with inflectional suffixes, we called it ‘steam’.

    Inflectional suffixes :

    –s (plural)
    –s (possessive)
    –s (third singular person)
    –ed (past tense)
    –en (past participle)
    –ing (present participle)
    –er (comparative)
    –est (superlative)
    Example :

    Bag (root) – bag(s) = bags (steam)

    Play (root) – play(er)(base)+(s) = players (steam)





    3.Base
    Base I any unit to which affixes of any kind derivational/lexical affixes can be added. All roots are bases. Bases are called steams only in the context of inflectional morphology.

    Example :

    Like (root) + -dis = dislike(base)+ -ed (inflectional suffixes) = disliked( steam)

    It means that stem ‘disliked’ come from base ‘dislike’

    Affixes

    Affixes is a morpheme (bound morpheme) which only occurs when attached to some other morphemes such as a root, steam or base. There are three kinds of affixes which are as follow :

    Prefix is an affix attached before a root, steam or base, like : re-,un-, -in, etc.
    Suffixe is an affix attached after a root, steam, base, like : -ly, -er, -ist, -s, -ing, and –ed.
    Infix ia an affix inserted into the root itself.
    Example :

    Write(root)+ (re-) = rewrite(base)+ (-ed) = rewrited (steam)

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  187. 1. Root is a word or word element (in other words, a morpheme) from which other words grow, usually through the addition of prefixes and suffixes. ... This simply means that a root is a word part that means something. It is a group of letters with meaning. an example allows, disallow, disallowed = allow explanation: allow is the root of allows, disallow and disallowed That means root is the original form of a word without any affix.

    2. STEM Steam is a word given a certain affix but does not change the type of word. For example root is a noun then steam must be a noun, if root is an adjective then steam is also an adjective example clothe =clothes (right) Explanation: clothe is root in the form of a noun, the stem is also a noun, = Clothier (wrong) explanation: friend is a noun while friendly is an adjective so it's not the same

    3. BASE All root and stem are base but not all base can be root and stem. Examples determine the root and stem of a base, for example Determine the root and steam of the word UNAFRAID!!! Discussion: root = Afraid stem = untafraid reason: because both are adjectives, remember root and steam are words of the same type.

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  188. Name: Nurhildayani
    NIM: 180230150
    Class: B/semester 4

    Root, Hearing the root word certainly imagined in our minds that the roots .. But we are here to discuss not discuss the said plant. To understand it directly to the examples

    likes, dislike, disliked = like
    explanation: like is the root of likes, dislike and disliked

    That means the root of a word is original form without any additive.

    2. STEM
    Steam is a word which was given particular additive but does not change the kind words. For example, the root is a noun then steamnya should be a noun, if the root adjective then steam also adjective .Here
    example

    friend = friends (right)
    explanation: friend is the root form of the noun it stemnya also a noun that friends

    friend = user (one)
    explanation: friend is friendly whereas the noun is an adjective so dissimilar

    3. BASE
    All the root and the stem is the base but not all of the base may be the root and stem. example

    unfriendly = friend / user / unfriend
    explanation: its base bis friend, friendly or unfriend

    >>> Example of determining the root and stem of a base, for example

    Determine the root and the steam from the word untouchable !!!

    discussion:
    root = Touchable
    stem = untouchable
    reason: as both an adjective, remember it root and steam are the words of the same type.

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  189. Name : Marwa Nurawalia
    Sin : 180220130
    Class/Sem : A / 4


    1. Root
    Root is the irreducible core of a word, with absolutely nothing else attached to it. Roots can be free morpheme or a word element which the other new words grow, usually through addition prefixes and suffixes.
    e.g
    Likes , dislike , disliked = Like
    Penjelasan : Like adalah akar dari likes , dislike dan disliked
    unhappy, root : happy

    2. Steam
    Steam is a word element to which grammatical or inflectional suffixes can be added. Every word that end with inflectional suffixes, we called it ‘steam’.
    e.g
    Friend = friends (benar)
    penjelasan : friend adalah root yang berupa kata benda maka stemnya juga kata benda yaitu friends
    Friend = friendly (salah)
    penjelasan : friend adalah kata benda sedangkan friendly adalah kata sifat jadi tidak sejenis
    Bag (root) – bag(s) = bags (steam)
    Play (root) – play(er)(base)+(s) = players (steam)

    3. Base
    Base I any unit to which affixes of any kind derivational/lexical affixes can be added. All roots are bases. Bases are called steams only in the context of inflectional morphology.
    e.g
    Unfriendly = friend / friendly / unfriend
    Penjelasan : base nya bisa friend , friendly ataupun unfriend
    Like (root) + -dis = dislike(base)+ -ed (inflectional suffixes) = disliked( steam)
    It means that stem ‘disliked’ come from base ‘dislike’

    Menentukan root dan stem dari suatu base
    e.g
    UNTOUCHABLE
    Pembahasan :
    root = touchable
    stem = untouchable
    Alasan : karena keduanya merupakan kata sifat

    Write(root)+ (re-) = rewrite(base)+ (-ed) = rewrited (steam)

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  190. NAME : SITI IRMA
    SIN : 180210168
    CLASS: A/IV

    1. Root

    Root is a term to refer to the form of words that can not be divided again, can not be analyzed again, no additional additions. This root is always there, although in the form of various modifications to a lexeme.

      Example
    walk: is the root, it can appear in the form of words, such as: walks, walking, walking.

    2. Stem

    Stems are parts of words before they are added with inflectional affixes. See an example;
    Plural noun base :

    * Cat -s
    * Worker

    In the form of the word cats, inflectional suffixes are added to the base of the cat, which is also the root. In the worker word form, inflectional suffixes (plural markers) are added to workers. Worker is stem (base), while work is root.

    3. Base

    Base is the form that forms the basis of the morphological process, where affixes can be added; both inflectional and derivational affixes. In other words that all root is also base.

    Example :

    1. Like (root) + -dis = dislike(base)+ -ed (inflectional suffixes) = disliked( steam)

    It means that stem ‘disliked’ come from base ‘dislike’

    2. breakable

    breakable is a base of unbreakable
    -Breakable is not root because can be analyzed by derivatiobal affix ( break +able).
    -breakable is not stem because not add by inflectional affix but derivational namely, able.

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