Building Words
Introduction to Morphology
Morphology is the study of how words are formed and structured. While phonology deals with sounds, morphology deals with meaningful units called morphemes. A morpheme is the smallest meaningful unit in a language. In English, the word 'unhappiness' contains three morphemes: 'un-' (negation), 'happy' (the root meaning content or pleased), and '-ness' (turns an adjective into a noun). Your conlang's morphological system determines how it builds words, expresses grammatical relationships, and creates new vocabulary from existing pieces. This is where your language starts to become truly functional and expressive.
Morphological Typology
Languages are traditionally classified into morphological types based on how they combine morphemes. In an isolating language (like Mandarin Chinese or Vietnamese), each word typically consists of a single morpheme, and grammatical relationships are expressed through word order and separate particles rather than affixes. In an agglutinative language (like Turkish, Swahili, or Japanese), words are built by stringing together clearly separable morphemes, each expressing a single grammatical function. In a fusional language (like Latin, Russian, or Spanish), individual affixes often express multiple grammatical categories simultaneously -- a single ending might encode tense, person, and number all at once. A polysynthetic language (like Inuktitut or Mohawk) can pack an entire sentence's worth of meaning into a single complex word with many morphemes. Most natural languages are a mixture of these types, and your conlang can be too.
Morphological Types Compared
| Type | How Words Are Built | Example Language | Sample Expression of 'I saw the house' |
|---|---|---|---|
| Isolating | Mostly single-morpheme words; grammar via word order | Mandarin | wo kan le fang (I / see / past / house) |
| Agglutinative | Multiple separable morphemes strung together | Turkish | ev-i gor-du-m (house-ACC see-PAST-1SG) |
| Fusional | Affixes encode multiple categories simultaneously | Latin | domum vid-i (house.ACC see-1SG.PAST) |
| Polysynthetic | Many morphemes per word; a word can be a sentence | Inuktitut | iglu-mik taku-vunga (house-like see-I) |
Affixes, Compounding, and Derivation
The primary tools for building words are affixation, compounding, and derivation. Affixes are morphemes attached to a root to modify its meaning or grammatical function. Prefixes attach to the front (English 'un-' in 'undo'), suffixes attach to the end (English '-ing' in 'running'), infixes are inserted into the middle (Tagalog '-um-' in 'sulat' becoming 'sumulat'), and circumfixes wrap around the root (German 'ge-...-t' in 'ge-mach-t'). Compounding combines two or more root words to create a new word (English 'sunflower' = 'sun' + 'flower'). Derivation uses affixes to change a word's category or core meaning (English 'teach' becomes 'teacher' with '-er'). You should decide which of these strategies your conlang uses and how productive each one is.
Morphology Quiz
1. In an agglutinative language, how are grammatical relationships typically expressed?
2. What is a morpheme?
3. Which type of affix is inserted into the middle of a root word?
Exercise: Design Your Morphological System
Decide on the morphological type of your conlang and design its basic word-building rules. Choose a primary morphological strategy (isolating, agglutinative, fusional, or a mixture). Create at least five affixes with clear meanings (such as a negation prefix, a plural suffix, a past-tense marker, an agent noun suffix, and a diminutive). Show how three sample root words combine with these affixes to form new words. If your language uses compounding, show at least two compound words and explain how their meaning is derived from the parts.