A Morphological Study Of All Suffixes In Folk Tales Cinderella And Rumpelstiltskin By The Brother Grimm

This research paper elaborates a morphological study of all suffixes in Folk Tales Cinderella and Rumpelstiltskin by The Brother Grimm. The objectives of research are to describe the types of suffix and the meaning words using suffixes in Folk Tales Cinderella and Rumpelstiltskin by The Brother Grim...

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Main Authors: Permatasari, Novita Dian (Author), , Drs. Sigit Haryanto, M.Hum (Author), , Dr. Dwi Haryanti, M.Hum (Author)
Format: Book
Published: 2014.
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Summary:This research paper elaborates a morphological study of all suffixes in Folk Tales Cinderella and Rumpelstiltskin by The Brother Grimm. The objectives of research are to describe the types of suffix and the meaning words using suffixes in Folk Tales Cinderella and Rumpelstiltskin by The Brother Grimm. The researcher employs the descriptive qualitative research. The objects are derivational and inflectional suffixes. The data sources are Folk Tales Cinderella and Rumpelstiltskin by The Brother Grimm. The method of collecting data reading completely the Folk Tales Cinderella and Rumpelstiltskin by The Brother Grimm. The technique of analysis the data are classifying into derivational and inflectional suffixes, identifying word class and meanings of words using suffixes and drawing conclusion. Based on the analysis data, the results indicated that the types of suffix derivational suffix and inflectional suffix. From all data 206 there are 13 data derivational suffixes and 193 data inflectional suffixes. The suffixes in Folk Tales Cinderella and Rumpelstiltskin by The Brother Grimm are: -ing‖, --ed‖, --s‖, --es‖, --st‖, --ly‖, --en‖, --y‖, --er‖, --ness‖. The example words using suffixes in folk tales Cinderella are burning, picking, liked, safety, quickly, singing, called, used, finding sitting, and inflectional suffixes are flying, worked, prayed, knocked, eyes, playing replies, names, dancing, woods. The suffixes mostly appear are suffix -s (indicator of plural) and suffix -ed (indicator of past tense).
Item Description:https://eprints.ums.ac.id/31754/1/FRONT_PAGE.pdf
https://eprints.ums.ac.id/31754/2/CHAPTER_I.pdf
https://eprints.ums.ac.id/31754/3/CHAPTER_II.pdf
https://eprints.ums.ac.id/31754/4/CHAPTER_III.pdf
https://eprints.ums.ac.id/31754/5/CHAPTER_IV.pdf
https://eprints.ums.ac.id/31754/6/CHAPTER_V.pdf
https://eprints.ums.ac.id/31754/7/BIBLIOGRAPHY.pdf
https://eprints.ums.ac.id/31754/8/APPENDIX.pdf
https://eprints.ums.ac.id/31754/9/PUBLICATION_ARTICLE.pdf