KnE Social Sciences

ISSN: 2518-668X

The latest conference proceedings on humanities, arts and social sciences.

Morphological Structure in Jason Mraz’s Songs

Published date:Mar 11 2021

Journal Title: KnE Social Sciences

Issue title: Annual International Conference on Language and Literature

Pages:338-344

DOI: 10.18502/kss.v5i4.8693

Authors:

Inatigris Anggriani Harahapinatigris@gmail.comUniversitas Negeri Medan ( UNIMED), Medan, Indonesia

Abstract:

This research focused on the morphological structure in Jason Mraz’s songs. This study used the theory of the Rochelle hypothesis (2009) and examined the morphemes found in Jason Mraz’s songs and their morphological structure. The songs were obtained directly from Google. This research applied a qualitative method. The data were analyzed by reading the lyrics of the Jason Mraz’s songs, underlining word by word, identifying the words by classing them into morphemes, and calculating the morphemes of each word to find out the frequency of the morphological structure. Jason Mraz’s songs used free morphemes (87.8%) dominantly in the songs, and also used bound morphemes, namely inflectional morphemes (8.5%) and derivational morphemes (3.7%).

Keywords: Morphological Structure, Jason Mraz, Songs

References:

[1] Bull, V. (2008). Oxford Learner’s Pocket Dictionary. New York: Oxford University Press.

[2] Buljan, G. (2005). Rochelle Lieber: Morphology and Lexical Semantics. In Cambridge Studies in Linguistics. Cambridge University Press.

[3] Dawson, N., Rastle, K., Ricketts, J. (2018). Morphological Effects in Visual Word Recognition: Children, Adolescents, and Adults. Journal of Experimental Psychology Learning Memory and Cognition, vol. 44, issue 4, pp. 645-654.

[4] Fowler, H. W. (1951). The Concise Oxford Dictionary. Oxford: Clarendom Press.

[5] Lieber, R. (2009). Introducing Morphology. New York: Cambridge University Press.

[6] Gay, R. L. (2009). Educational Research. London: Pearson.

[7] Smolka, Eva., Libben, Gary., U. Dressler, Wolfgang. (2019). When Morphological Structure Overrides Meaning: Evidence from German Prefix and Particle Verbs. Language, Cognition and Neuroscience, vol. 34, issue 5, pp. 599-614

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