Hi,
In linguistics, morphology is the identification, analysis and description of the structure of a given language's morphemes and other linguistic units, such as words, affixes, parts of speech, intonation/stress, or implied context
Raymond Bertram has written: 'Morphology in the mind' -- subject(s): Acquisition, Comparative and general Grammar, Dutch language, Finnish language, Language acquisition, Morphology
No. Generally, one instruction in a high level language corresponds to many instructions in machine language.
Morphology in linguistics is the study of how words are formed and their structure. It includes categories such as inflectional morphology (changes within a word to indicate grammatical features like tense or number) and derivational morphology (creation of new words through affixation or other processes). Other categories include compounding (joining multiple words to create new ones) and suppletion (irregular forms that don't follow regular morphological rules).
Ives Goddard has written: 'Native Languages and Language Families of North America' 'Delaware verbal morphology' -- subject(s): Delaware language, Morphology, Verb
Lynn Gordon has written: 'Maricopa morphology and syntax' -- subject(s): Maricopa language, Morphology, Syntax
Morphology is the study of the formation of words. It is important in understanding how a language system works and how words can be used and modified.
An absolute instruction is an assembly language instruction using only absolute addresses.
morphology is the study of the structure of an organism... or parts of it...
It depends on what timeframe you are referring to, but for the last 2 centuries at least, the language of instruction has been French.
It is an assembler language programmer
Arabic is the language of instruction.
Brian Daniel Joseph has written: 'Morphology and universals in syntactic change' -- subject(s): Greek language, Morphology, Syntax