Morphim in modern linguistic studies and its relation to context

Abstract

Modern descriptive linguistic studies have been concerned with the concept of the morpheme, to be a substitute for the word, and the morpheme represents the smallest abstract linguistic unit with meaning, and the most famous division of this concept is based on three sections: the free morpheme, the restricted morpheme, the zero morpheme, and its relationship to the context, as it forms a system that acquires Each one has its value according to its locational relationship with respect to the other morphemes, and it is nothing more than outside the context except for buildings bearing two meanings: a morphological meaning that will only be achieved in a context, and the lexical meaning of multiple possibilities, whether it is at the level of the morphological meaning, or the lexical level, while the meaning that is It is provided by the context, and especially the linguistic context. It is a specific meaning that has clear boundaries and specific features that are not subject to multiplicity, participation, or generalization