1
Are facts whose truth is required in order that the utterance be appropriate.
2
Words whose sound seems to reflect their meaning fairly directly
3
Natural groupings of a sentence
4
Sequences of words that conform to the rules of syntax.
5
Part of the meaning of more implies that there has already been something.
6
Area of grammar concerned with the structure of words and with relationships between words involving the morphemes that compose them.
7
Is concerned with the interpretation of linguistic meaning in context.
8
Morphemes that have two or more different pronunciations.
9
Smaller parts of words.
10
The study of the linguistic meaning of morphemes, words, phrases, and sentences.
11
Multiple meanings for one expression.
12
Large linguistic units that permit to express complex thoughts and ideas.
13
Used in place of noun phrases or to refer to an entity presumably known to the discourse participants.
14
Morphemes that precede the root.
15
Is a traditional saying, syntactically a sentence, whose conventional interpretation differs from what is suggested by the literal meaning of the words it contains.
16
Are different words that are pronounced in the same, but may not be the same.
17
The part of the grammar that represents a speaker’s knowledge of sentences and their structures.
18
When a pronoun refers to some objects not explicitly mentioned in the discourse.
19
Expression whose meaning is not predictable on the basis of the meanings of its components.
20
Partially complete word form to which an affix is attached so as to create either an inflected word form or a new lexeme.