English, asked by wwwanuragverma3212, 1 year ago

Why does the poet want us to be firm and resolute

Answers

Answered by vivek401
0
Free Morphemes and Bound Morphemes

Internal Structure of a Word

Morphemes
Free Morphemes and
Bound Morphemes
Root and Affixes
Functions of
Free Morphemes and
Bound Morphemes

Morphemes that can stand alone to function as words are called free morphemes. They comprise simple words (i.e. words made up of one free morpheme) and compound words (i.e. words made up of two free morphemes).

Examples:

Simple words: the, run, on, well

Compound words: keyboard, greenhouse, bloodshed, smartphone


Morphemes that can only be attached to another part of a word (cannot stand alone) are called bound morphemes.

Examples:

pre-, dis-, in-, un-, -ful, -able, -ment, -ly, -ise

pretest, discontent, intolerable, receive


Complex words are words that are made up of both free morpheme(s) and bound morpheme(s), or two or more bound morphemes.

Roll your mouse over the words below to see how many morphemes are there and whether they are free morphemes or bound morphemes.
againstimperativerealizesubmitassignmentFacebookuncommonmisinterpretdisqualifiedencounteredgeographyirresistible

Answered by familygeorge30
2

Answer:

The poet wants us to be firm and resolute so that we can be friends with the wind. His friendship is good on account of the fact that the wind makes the strong flourish and dauntless.

Explanation:

Hope it helps u...

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