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1 Derivational and Inflectional Morphology

LINGUISTICS ORGANIC SEARCH ENGINE THEORY
(LOSE-T) PART I

Search Engine Optimization (SEO), (SERP), (NLP), Derivational and Inflectional Morphology

prefix, suffix, compound, affix

Morphology is a branch of linguistics that investigates the internal structure and formation of lexemes (words), a process that entails dismantling and identification of the smallest units called morphemes. There’s different kinds of morphemes; free morphemes and bound morphemes; the former are classified as independent standalone word functions, and the latter constitutes a morphological association to other morphemes; bound morphemes contrast free morphemes in that they’re not standalone units.

Bound morphemes example; unready, or jumping, constitutes a prefix or suffix affixation. Whereas affixed free morphemes consists of words such as, “blackboard,” “greenhouse,” and “mailman;” they’re standalone words whether they’re affixed or independent constituents. Compound words consist of two free morphemes or two bound morphemes; the former are words such as “blacklist” and “whitehouse,” and the latter, are words such as “astronaut” and “academic.” Compound words may or may not be connected by hyphens, and this punctuation affixation differs from dictionary to dictionary.

The juxtaposition of incongruous words can induce a synthesis definition that contrast lexemes in their independent constituents; such as “brainwash;” a radical set of beliefs; as opposed to “brain,” as a tangible noun, and “wash,” is an applicative verb. “Tablespoon,” refers to measurement, where’s if they’re detached into independent constituents such as “table,” and “spoon,” you’re defining “utensils.” Two free morphemes that defines “utensils,” when affixed induces the abstract synthesis of “measurement.” If these free morphemes are affixed by hyphens it can incur polysemic ambiguity in the search query.

“Affixation,” has distinct ambiguous meanings; ones the verb, meaning “to fasten together,” and the other is the noun, meaning “the beginning (prefix), or end, (suffix), of a stem, root or word (lexeme).” Hence, I’m using both definitions interchangeably to illustrate the ambiguous problem of homonymic ambiguity and its contextual misuse; what’s interesting is, “affixation,” does apply when lexemes are compounded, because “affixation” means to “fasten, join, link, connect, merge etc.” Interestingly enough, “affixation,” in terms of specificity, grammatically applies to when prefix and suffix are added to the root, stem or lexemes…

Some compound words may have multiple dictionary entries because of their different interpretations; when you affix both free morphemes “blackbird,” it’s a “breed of bird;” as independent lexemes their constituents induces “black as color” and “bird as vertebrate.” If “black” precedes “bird” without affixation or hyphens, “black bird,” is a bird of color. There’s other kinds of morphemes called derivational morphemes, where the prefix or suffix converts, modifies or contrast the root lexicon; “singer,” and “unskilled.” Derivational morphemes creates new words out of old words. The verb “sing,” becomes the noun “singer,” and the adjective “skilled,” becomes the contrasting adjective “unskilled.”

Then there’s Inflectional morphemes which tends to augment or modify lexemes past to present or singular to plural; “egg,” singular to “eggs,” plural with the “s,” added suffix; unlike bound morphemes, inflectional morphemes never changes the grammatical function of the word. There’s also cases of both derivational and inflectional morphemes affixed as both prefix and suffix, or multiples suffixes in the root of a lexicon. A prime example is “government-s,” where “ment,” is the derivational morpheme preceding “s,” the inflectional morpheme. The derivational morpheme “ment,” changes the meaning and “s,” distinguishes “governments,” as the plural form of “government,” which is singular…

The unpredictability of compound words and their meanings in their independent constituents require multiple definitions, one that activates a polysemic meaning….Idioms, adages and other phrases don’t lend itself well to ambiguity because it’s unequivocal within its syntactical constrictions. Phrases are conceptual units contingent on each other to encapsulate the whole meaning; idiomatic groups of words such as “break a leg,” is a literal phrase with metaphorical interpretation; meaning “do well.”

Adages are wise old sayings or moral attributes beyond its literal phrasal theme; “early bird catches the worm,” where the literal phrase induces a metaphorical truth, “success requires immediacy.” This phrase is more proverbial than adages, but both terms are used interchangeably with subtle differences because of the underlying theme is an inherent truth. Search engines query root words more efficiently than collocations, affixed and compound lexemes, because prefixed, suffixed and affixed lexemes blurs the algorithms search results. Compounded or affixed lexemes in a lexical or syntactical structure induces multiple ambiguities beyond its independent constituents.

Search Engine Optimization (SEO), and Google’s algorithm encounter geographical semantic ambiguity and the indecisiveness between preferred languages to decipher affixed free morphemes such as; “football,” because although it’s homonymic, (same spelling and pronunciation), the rules of the games are geographically and culturally mutually exclusive. This poses an algorithmic challenge—whether to decipher syntax or index a myriad of ambiguous queries in the search engine result page (SERF). The latter works invariably by taking all semantic variants into account and shifting the search curation back to the user.


The History of Linguistics Organic Search Engine Theory (LOSE-T), (SEO), and Word Sense Disambiguation (WSD)


INTRODUCTION TO (LOSE-T)

THE EVOLUTION OF (LOSE-T)


THE HISTORY OF (LOSE-T)

PHENOMENOLOGY (LOSE-T)


Introduction To (LOSE-T) Search Query Disambiguation (SQD)

(1) (SEO), (SERP), (NLP), Derivational & Inflectional Morphology
(2) (SEO), (SERP), (NLP), Metaphor, Analogy, Metonym
(3) (SEO), (SERP), (NLP), Polysemy, Capitonym, Monosemy
(4) (SEO), (SERP), Homonym, Homophones, Homograph
(5) (SEO), (SERP), Segmental & Suprasegmental Phonology
(6) (SEO), (SERP), Paronym, Hyponym, Meronym, Hypernym
(7) (SEO), (SERP), Onomatopoeia, Denotation and Connotation
(8) (SEO), (SERP), Heteronym, Heterograph, Orthographic Units
(9) (SEO), (SERP), (NLP), Cuneiform, Pictographs, Ideographs
(10) (SEO), (SERP), Logographs, Hieroglyphics, Phonographs
(11) (SEO), (SERP), Abbreviations, Acronyms-Hybrids, Initialisms
(12) (SEO) (SERP) Anthropomorphic, Personification, Typography
(13) (SEO), (SERP) Holonyms, Synonyms, Antonyms, Taxonomy
(14) (SEO), (SERP) Prefix, Suffix, Affix, Infix, Circumfix, Morpheme
(15) (SEO), (LOSE-T) Taxonomic Framework To Encode (NLP)
(16) (SEO), (SERP) Absolute, Comparative, Superlative Adjectives
(17) (SEO), (SERP) Redshift, Doppler, Special & General Relativity
(18) (SEO), Possessive, Demonstrative, Indefinite Adjectives
(19) (SEO), (NLP), Proper Nouns, Common Nouns, Capitonymic
(20) (SEO), (NLP), Modulation, Cadence, Intonation, Inflection
(21) (SEO), (NLP), Terminology, Jargon, Verbosity, Slang/Ebonics
(22) (SEO), (NLP) Phonemes, Graphemes, Morphemes, Digraphs
(23) (SEO), (NLP), Autocomplete, Spelling Correction Predictions
(24) (SEO), (NLP), Algorithmic Paradoxes, Equilibriums, Axioms
(25) (SEO), (NLP), Chromatics, Diatonics, Logarithmics, Octaves
(26) (SEO), (NLP), Anaphora, Cataphora, Antecedent, Postcedent
(27) (SEO), (NLP), Hegelians Dialect; Thesis, Antithesis, Synthesis


(1) Fundamental vs Technical Analysis in The Stock-Market
(2) Predicting The Stock Market Using Dispersed Variables..
(3) (SEO), (SMO), (SERP), And Google Algorithms..
(4) ICANN), (gTLD), Domain Registras & Cyber-Squatting..
(5) Domain Names (gTLD), Effect On (SEO), Stock-Market..
(6) 10-K, 10-Q, Annual Reports And Google Revenue..
(7) (ICANN), (UDRP), Domain Trademark And Cybersquatting..
(8) Economic Correlation/Advertisement, Marketing & Commodity!


(1) Three Dimensional Paradoxes In Spatial Schemata
(2) Vibrating Molecules and Elliptical Bubbles
(3) Musical Octaves and Wave-Particle Duality
(4) Smells Velocity Induces Memory Faculty
(5)
The Paradox of Light and Sound Induces Synesthesia
(6) The Trichotomy Between Amplitude, Frequency and Velocity
(7) Black Is An Electromagnetic-Radiation (EM) Paradox
(8) Quantum Field Theory, Nash Equilibrium & Social Science
(9) Quantum Electrodynamics, Intramolecular, Intermolecular
(10) The Fibonacci Sequence & Coriolis Effect; Music & Motion


(1) The Emotional Dichotomy in Humor
(2) Neuro-Behavioral Disorder Adaptation
(3) Why Comedians Don’t Laugh At Open Mics
(4) Economic Psychology and Humor Aberration
(5) The Philosophy And Psychology Behind Fozzie Bear Humor
(6) Women Comics! A Sociobiological and Economical Analysis
(7) The Trichotomy Between Instinct, Intuition and Improvisation
(8) Synasthesia, Psychophysics, Linguistics and Humor!

The Wave-Medium Dichotomy Between Light and Sound
The Contrasting Distinctions Between Metaphor and Analogy
Thermodynamics and The Industrial Revolution
Analogically Correlating The Third Law of Motion Equilibrium
American History Pervasive With Irony 13th, 14th, 15th Amendment
The Fallibility of Improper Metaphor Congress and Atoms
Sarcasm Phonology, Ambiguity, Semiotics, Semantics etc..
Dramatic, Situational, Verbal, Tragic, Socratic Irony
Apophenia, Pareidolia, Psychosis, Schizophrenia
Synchronicity, Serendipity, Irony, Coincidences
Lexical, Syntactical and Structural Ambiguity
Incongruous Juxtaposition Resolution


(1) Ecological Factors and Physiological Attributes 
(2) The Psychology of Politics Equatable Rhetorics
(3) Psychophysics, Polyrhythm, Arrangement and Composition
(4) Smells Velocity Induces Memory Faculty
(5) Cognitive Impairment/Weather Conditions/Placebo Effect
(6) The Social Equilibrium of Spirituality vs Superficiality
(7)  Quantum Entanglement, Chameleon Effect and Coincidences
(8) Synthesis Deriving From A Medical Antithesis
(9) The Power of Analogy, A Peculiar Mnemonics
(10) A Metaphor In Physics To Induce Organic Sleep
(11) Karma The Spiritual Undertone In Cause and Effect  
(12) Distinctions Between Verbal Irony and Verbal Sarcasm  
(13) School District Negligence, A Butterfly a Effect Analogy 
(14) Dogs Defecating Alignment With The Earths Magnetic Field  
(15) Fundamental vs Technical Analysis in The Stock-Market  
(16) A Conglomeration of Political Discrepancy 

Share your views and opinion, please leave a comment below Written By: Atelston Fitzgerald Holder 1st
SCIENTIST | ACADEMIC WRITER | LECTURER
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Copyright 2016

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