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Yükleniyor... !%#!%$#%&(!)(*())(*#+)(+-./0123456789:;?@AB Yükleniyor... The best way to learn how to craft words is to read. When you are reading anything, look for repetition of prefixes, suffixes, and roots. Absorb the language. Practice by substituting new endings for words in sentences that you know. Read aloud and slowly at first then increase your speed until it is comfortable. Gradually include more difficult words into your readings until they are second nature to you.. Words are the building blocks of a language. In order to learn any language, one must first learn its vocabulary. You should know these words because they represent commonly used structures in a given language. These words can also indicate common trends within a language, such as patterns of derivation and inflection, which can be useful in figuring out how to build your own words.. The structure of a word is defined by its stem and any affixes. A stem carries the basic meaning of a word while an affix modifies this meaning in some way. Knowing the structure of words will help you decipher new words faster and remember them better.. Stems can be either free or bound. In a free stem, the word is inflected with no affixes attached to it. In a bound stem, two or more affixes are attached to the root. By knowing the basic structures of words, you will have an easier time with compound words and new languages.. In most languages there is a dominant root that determines what affixes attach to this root. The Germanic languages have a dominant "feindschaft" root that indicates the formation of "adjectives with comparative and superlative endings. Romance languages have a dominant "sens" root that indicates the formation of adjectives with the comparative and superlative endings. For example, in most Romance languages one can say dat ist mein Vater (my father), my father is old ( dat is mein vader oud, my father is old), he is tall (er is’n veurh skoarlik, he looks tall). Stem-Suffix - suffixes are affixes that are attached to the stem of a word. An example of this in English would be "-fy". Noun stems often take suffixes that indicate a change in the meaning of a word. For example, the English word "tired" has a suffix (-ed) which changes the stem "tire" to mean tired, as in "the car is tired." In most romance languages, most feminine words have a "-a" or "-e" suffix. In Germanic languages they have most masculine words have an "-az" or "-urr". In Turkish most suffixes can be used with any root. Stem Changing - most stems change their sound when they are attached to a certain class of affixes. eccc085e13
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