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Morphemes

How Spanish, English and Chinese build words from the smallest meaningful units.

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Morphemes are the smallest meaningful units in language. Spanish and English use extensive inflectional and derivational morphology. Chinese has almost no inflection, with most morphemes being free or bound roots.

Examples

cats = cat + -s

gatos = gato + -s (plural inflection)

walked = walk + -ed

caminó = caminar + -ó (past inflection)

happiness = happy + -ness

felicidad = feliz + -idad (derivation)

unhappy = un- + happy

infeliz = in- + feliz (derivation)

bookshelf = book + shelf

estante para libros (phrase, not compound)

read + er = reader (agent)

leer + -dor = lector (agentive suffix)

breakable = break + -able

rompible = romp- + -ible (derivation)

Inflectional paradigm (verb)

hablo/hablas/habla/hablamos/hablan (6 forms)

Examples

cats = cat + -s

cats = cat + -s (plural inflection)

walked = walk + -ed

walked = walk + -ed (past inflection)

happiness = happy + -ness

happiness = happy + -ness (derivation)

unhappy = un- + happy

unhappy = un- + happy (derivation)

bookshelf = book + shelf

bookshelf = book + shelf (compound)

read + er = reader (agent)

read + -er = reader (agentive suffix)

breakable = break + -able

breakable = break + -able (derivation)

Inflectional paradigm (verb)

speak/speaks (2 forms in present)

Examples

cats = cat + -s

māo (no plural marking; classifier if counted: zhīmāo)

walked = walk + -ed

zǒule (zǒu + aspect particle, not inflection)

happiness = happy + -ness

xìnggǎn (compound: happiness-feeling)

unhappy = un- + happy

gāoxìng ( + adjective compound)

bookshelf = book + shelf

shūjià = shū + jià (compound)

read + er = reader (agent)

zhě = + zhě (agentive suffix-like)

breakable = break + -able

suì = + suì (compound: easily-broken)

Inflectional paradigm (verb)

shuō (1 invariant form)

Comparison at a glance

Grammar concepts Spanish English Chinese
cats = cat + -s gatos = gato + -s (plural inflection)cats = cat + -s (plural inflection)māo (no plural marking; classifier if counted: zhīmāo)
walked = walk + -ed caminó = caminar + -ó (past inflection)walked = walk + -ed (past inflection)zǒule (zǒu + aspect particle, not inflection)
happiness = happy + -ness felicidad = feliz + -idad (derivation)happiness = happy + -ness (derivation)xìnggǎn (compound: happiness-feeling)
unhappy = un- + happy infeliz = in- + feliz (derivation)unhappy = un- + happy (derivation)gāoxìng ( + adjective compound)
bookshelf = book + shelf estante para libros (phrase, not compound)bookshelf = book + shelf (compound)shūjià = shū + jià (compound)
read + er = reader (agent) leer + -dor = lector (agentive suffix)read + -er = reader (agentive suffix)zhě = + zhě (agentive suffix-like)
breakable = break + -able rompible = romp- + -ible (derivation)breakable = break + -able (derivation)suì = + suì (compound: easily-broken)
Inflectional paradigm (verb) hablo/hablas/habla/hablamos/hablan (6 forms)speak/speaks (2 forms in present)shuō (1 invariant form)

Side-by-side comparison

Grammar concepts Spanish English Chinese
cats = cat + -s gatos = gato + -s (plural inflection)cats = cat + -s (plural inflection)māo (no plural marking; classifier if counted: zhīmāo)
walked = walk + -ed caminó = caminar + -ó (past inflection)walked = walk + -ed (past inflection)zǒule (zǒu + aspect particle, not inflection)
happiness = happy + -ness felicidad = feliz + -idad (derivation)happiness = happy + -ness (derivation)xìnggǎn (compound: happiness-feeling)
unhappy = un- + happy infeliz = in- + feliz (derivation)unhappy = un- + happy (derivation)gāoxìng ( + adjective compound)
bookshelf = book + shelf estante para libros (phrase, not compound)bookshelf = book + shelf (compound)shūjià = shū + jià (compound)
read + er = reader (agent) leer + -dor = lector (agentive suffix)read + -er = reader (agentive suffix)zhě = + zhě (agentive suffix-like)
breakable = break + -able rompible = romp- + -ible (derivation)breakable = break + -able (derivation)suì = + suì (compound: easily-broken)
Inflectional paradigm (verb) hablo/hablas/habla/hablamos/hablan (6 forms)speak/speaks (2 forms in present)shuō (1 invariant form)

Examples in context

cats = cat + -s

Spanish

gatos = gato + -s (plural inflection)

English

cats = cat + -s (plural inflection)

Chinese

māo (no plural marking; classifier if counted: zhīmāo)

walked = walk + -ed

Spanish

caminó = caminar + -ó (past inflection)

English

walked = walk + -ed (past inflection)

Chinese

zǒule (zǒu + aspect particle, not inflection)

happiness = happy + -ness

Spanish

felicidad = feliz + -idad (derivation)

English

happiness = happy + -ness (derivation)

Chinese

xìnggǎn (compound: happiness-feeling)

unhappy = un- + happy

Spanish

infeliz = in- + feliz (derivation)

English

unhappy = un- + happy (derivation)

Chinese

gāoxìng ( + adjective compound)

bookshelf = book + shelf

Spanish

estante para libros (phrase, not compound)

English

bookshelf = book + shelf (compound)

Chinese

shūjià = shū + jià (compound)

read + er = reader (agent)

Spanish

leer + -dor = lector (agentive suffix)

English

read + -er = reader (agentive suffix)

Chinese

zhě = + zhě (agentive suffix-like)

breakable = break + -able

Spanish

rompible = romp- + -ible (derivation)

English

breakable = break + -able (derivation)

Chinese

suì = + suì (compound: easily-broken)

Inflectional paradigm (verb)

Spanish

hablo/hablas/habla/hablamos/hablan (6 forms)

English

speak/speaks (2 forms in present)

Chinese

shuō (1 invariant form)

Key Takeaways

Spanish: Rich inflectional system (gender, number, person, tense, mood). Productive derivational morphology.

English: Minimal inflection but productive derivational morphology. Compounding is extremely productive.

Chinese: Almost no inflection. Most morphemes are free or bound roots. Compounding is the dominant word-formation strategy.

Key concepts compared: cats = cat + -s, walked = walk + -ed, happiness = happy + -ness.

Last updated: June 4, 2026