The Understanding of MorphologyAfter learning Chapter3 Morphology, I get more than I had imagined, knowing something new. For example, I can define the free and bound morphemes and distinguish the differences of foresaid terms and dissect the words into morphemes and root. There are some understandings of it below.A sentence is not the smallest grammatical unit, as it consists of other smaller units called words. In many languages, what appear to be single forms actually turn out to contain a large number of ―word-like‖ elements. For example, in English, the word unfriendly is formed from friend, the adjective forming suffix –ly and the negative prefix un-. These three ―word-like‖ el ements are the most basic elements of meaning.Firstly, morphology, in my opinion, refers to the study of the internal structure of words and the rules by which words are formed. We can divided all words into two main groups, one group is open class words that also are called content words, which includes nouns, verbs, adjectives and adverbs; the other group is close class words that are also called grammatical/functional words, which includes conjunction, prepositions, articles, pronouns and determiners.Secondly, morphemes—the minimal unit of meaning, is the smallest unit that carries grammatical and /or semantic meaning. For example, the English word tourists contain three morphemes: tour------the root, -ist ------person who does something, -s ------indicating plurality. Morphemes also can be divided into two main groups that are free morphemes and bound morphemes; what’s more, each of them also contains two groups. Next, I will explain them one by one. Free morpheme can stand alone as words. They can be used on their own, such car, tree, sing, dance, etc. A word must contain an element that can stand by itself. Such an element is called a root. A word may contain more than one root, in which case it is a compound word, e.g. bookshop and blackbird. In this part, we should understand the different between root and stem.A root is that part of the word left when all the affixes (inflectional & derivational) are removed, e.g. ―desire‖ in ―desirable‖, ―care‖ in ―carefully‖, while a stem is part of a word-form which remains when all inflectional affixes have been removed, e.g. ―undesirable‖ in ―undesirables‖. A stem of a word may be contains several kinds below. (i)A simple stem consisting of only one morpheme, in which case the root and the stem are the same, e.g. work is both the stem and the root. (ii) A root plus a derivational affix, e.g. worker, work is the root, worker is the stem. (iii) Two or more roots, e.g. workshop, both work and shop are roots, workshop is the stem.Thirdly, I will explain the affix. There are three kinds of it: prefixes, suffixes and infixes. Prefixes are the morphemes that can be joined to the beginning of the root or stem. Prefix can change the meaning or function of the word, e.g. un-, dis-, anti-, ir-, etc. Suffixes are the morphemes that can be joined to the end of the root or stem. Suffix can also change the meaning or function of the word, e.g. -ful, -er, -ish, -ness, -able, -tive, -tion, etc. Infixes are the morphemes that are inserted into other morpheme. Compared to prefixes and suffixes, infixes are relatively rare in the languages of the world.Fourthly, I will introduce free morphemes and bond morphemes in details. Freemorphemes contain lexical morpheme and functional morpheme. Lexical morpheme carries the content of massages we convey, e.g. book, desk and house. Functional morpheme consists of the functional words in language. Bound morpheme is one that may appear with at least one other morpheme. They cannot normally stands alone but function only as parts of words, such as ―-s‖ ―-er‖―-ed‖ and ―-ing‖etc. Bound morphemes also contain two categories that are derivational morphemes and inflectional morphemes. Derivational morphemes are used to make new words and to make words of a different grammatical category from the stem. Inflectional morphemes are not used to produce, but rather to show aspects of the grammatical function of a word. They are used to indicate whether a word is singular or plural, whether it is in the past tense or present tense, and whether it is a possessive or comparative form. English has only eight inflectional morphemes: noun + -’s,-s; verb + -s,-ing,-ed,-en; adjective + -er,-est.Finally, I will say something about the difference between derivational and inflectional morphemes. One is that derivational morpheme can change the grammatical category of word while inflectional morpheme never alters the grammatical category of word. The other is that derivational morpheme can create an entirely new word, but inflectional morpheme only creates a different version of the adjective.。