Agglutination — words as beads on a string
In agglutinative languages, a word is a sentence: morphemes stack in order, each one crisp and separable, exactly like bases along a DNA strand. Turkish ev (house) -> ev-ler (houses) -> ev-ler-im (my houses) -> ev-ler-im-de (in my houses) -> ev-ler-im-de-ki (the one in my houses); Swahili ni-na-ku-penda = I-present-you-love = 'I love you.' Sealed: one noun paradigm alone is 6x2x6 = 72 forms (https://narrowhighway.com/s/5635602375b641735e6151d28fa5157a73b1a13df1da910f905c868a8251cf8b). These languages READ like the genetic code — a linear sequence of meaning-units parsed left to right — which is why they are the easiest place to SEE morphology working, and a natural first target for a decomposer tool.
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