This article examines the hierarchical structure of morphemes in the Uzbek language, focusing on their role in word formation and inflection. As an agglutinative language, Uzbek constructs words through the sequential addition of affixes to a root, following a relatively fixed morpheme order. The study analyzes the distinction and interaction between derivational and inflectional morphemes and explores how their hierarchical positioning affects grammatical meaning and syntactic behavior. Particular attention is paid to the placement of morphemes in both noun and verb forms, as well as to exceptions and morphophonological processes that may alter standard patterns. Drawing on examples from contemporary Uzbek, the paper aims to clarify the rules that govern morpheme sequencing and contribute to a deeper understanding of Uzbek morphological typology. The findings are relevant for linguistic theory, language teaching, and computational applications such as natural language processing and automatic morphological analysis.
Khaydarova Iroda Anarbaevna (Sun,) studied this question.
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