derivativeness
Derivativeness is a term used in morphology to describe the degree to which a word is derived from a base form through derivation, as opposed to inflection or simple composition. A derived word results from processes that typically change meaning, lexical category, or both, often by attaching prefixes or suffixes. Derivation contrasts with inflection, which mainly signals grammatical agreement, and with compounding, which combines independent words.
Common derivational processes include prefixation and suffixation, yielding examples such as happy to happiness, modern to
In linguistic practice, derivativeness interacts with language-specific morphology. Highly synthetic languages with rich affix systems show