käändmorfemid
Käändmorfemid, also known as inflectional morphemes, are linguistic units that indicate grammatical categories such as case, number, gender, tense, mood, and voice. They are attached to the base form of a word, known as the stem, to create inflected forms that convey specific grammatical information. For example, in the English word "cats," the morpheme "-s" is a käändmorfem that indicates plural number. In Finnish, käändmorfemid are more extensive and can alter the meaning of a word significantly. For instance, the word "kissa" (cat) can be inflected to "kissani" (my cat) by adding the morpheme "-ni," which indicates possession and the first person singular. Käändmorfemid are a fundamental aspect of inflectional languages, where they play a crucial role in expressing grammatical relationships and conveying meaning. They are distinct from derivational morphemes, which change the meaning of a word by adding new lexical information, and from bound morphemes, which cannot stand alone as words. The study of käändmorfemid is essential for understanding the morphological structure of languages and their grammatical systems.