If we consider this word from the point of view of morphology, then get bored - this is a verb of imperfect form, which is intransitive, reflexive, second conjugation (according to the classification of A. Zaliznyak - 4a).
Meaning and examples of use
Missing you is a multi-valued word and has the following meanings:
- It can be used if it is necessary to express a lack of interest in any situation. I guess I would never be bored being in your company. He began to get bored, being in this room completely alone. She left these places with the hope that she would never again have to experience the deadly boredom that had fettered her during these months. In colloquial speech, it is also appropriate to use it to describe a person from whom one can expect any kind of surprise and unpredictable act. You never get bored. Nobody knew exactly what was happening in her head, but everyone recognized that you would not get bored with her.
- This verb can also be used to convey longing for someone or something. Missing you hometown. He understood that the meaning of the word βmissedβ was not just longing for him, but an urgent need to return home again. Miss you at work. In colloquial speech, the word "miss you" can be used to describe an urgent need. Missing out on good music. Miss you reading.
Building collocations
According to the dictionary of D. E. Rosenthal "Management in the Russian language", there are three possible uses of the word "miss you" in its meanings in phrases:
- About someone: Have you probably missed the house? He was so busy with work that he simply did not have enough time to miss his former life.
- For something (with a third-person noun or personal pronoun): He missed his uncleβs fascinating stories. She missed the picturesque expanses of her homeland. Attention! Using in the form of someone is an unacceptable regional option.
- For someone (with personal pronouns of the first and second person plural): Did you miss us?
Morphological analysis
with | bored | and | to | sya |
console | root | suffix | verb ending | postfix (return suffix) |
"Miss you" can be divided into five parts: the prefix, root, suffix, verb ending and postfix. Since -t is a verb ending, it is not included in the basis of the word: miss + sy.