partistemme
Partistemme is a theoretical framework in linguistics and natural language processing for analyzing word formation by partitioning a word into two complementary components: a stable stem (stemme) that carries core semantic content, and one or more parts (parts) that attach to or modify the stem to encode grammatical or derivational information. The approach emphasizes separating invariant meaning-bearing material from productive affixes and morphophonological variations.
Etymology and background: The term combines part- (from a notion of portions or attachments) and stemme (a
Methodology: In practice, partistemme proceeds by hypothesizing candidate stems across a lexicon, then identifying recurring attachment
Applications: The framework informs morphological analysis, stemming, lemmatization, and machine translation, particularly for languages with rich
Examples: The English word unhappy endings can be interpreted as stem "happy" with two attached parts: prefix
See also: Morphology, Stemming, Lemmatization, Morphological analysis, Natural language processing.