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Nafdi Irawan
Universitas Putera Batam

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A MORPHOLOGICAL ANALYSIS OF AI-GENERATED ENGLISH TEXTS COMPARED TO HUMAN ACADEMIC WRITING Sipri Hanus Tewarat; Afriana Afriana; Zia Hisni Mubarak; Nafdi Irawan
IdeBahasa Vol 8 No 1 (2026): Jurnal Idebahasa Vol 8 No 1 Juni 2026
Publisher : Asosiasi dosen IDEBAHASA KEPRI

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.37296/idebahasa.v8i1.417

Abstract

This study investigated the morphological characteristics of AI-generated English texts in comparison with human academic writing, focusing on affixation, compounding, lexical patterns, and word-formation processes. It specifically aimed to identify morphological differences between both text types, examine how AI language models construct academic discourse at the word-formation level, and determine whether morphological analysis can effectively distinguish machine-produced from human-written academic texts. Ten academic texts — five ChatGPT-generated outputs and five drawn from student essays and final assignment articles — were purposively selected based on comparable topic, length, and register. Employing a qualitative descriptive design with a comparative approach, data were collected through documentation and analyzed using qualitative content analysis framework of data condensation, data display, and conclusion drawing. Morphological features were systematically classified into derivational affixes, inflectional affixes, compounds, acronyms, and lexical patterns. The findings revealed notable distinctions between the two text types. AI-generated texts displayed higher frequencies of derivational suffixes (186 instances) and lexical repetition (79 instances), with heavy dependence on standardized suffixes such as -tion, -ment, and -ity to sustain academic formality. Human-written texts, conversely, exhibited greater morphological complexity through multi-affix constructions like misinterpretation and unpredictability, richer compounding patterns including self-regulated learning and cross-cultural communication, and broader lexical diversity achieved through synonym substitution. The study concludes that, while AI-generated writing demonstrates grammatical consistency, human academic discourse remains superior in lexical richness, morphological creativity, and contextual adaptability.
SOCIAL CLASSES AND OCCUPATIONS OF JAVANESE SOCIETY IN 1950’s PORTRAYED IN “CIGARETTE GIRL” BY RATIH KUMALA Robby Satria; Nafdi Irawan; Hermanda Octavian
IdeBahasa Vol 8 No 1 (2026): Jurnal Idebahasa Vol 8 No 1 Juni 2026
Publisher : Asosiasi dosen IDEBAHASA KEPRI

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.37296/idebahasa.v8i1.420

Abstract

This study aims to identify the types of social classes and occupations represented in Javanese society in the 1950s as portrayed in Ratih Kumala’s Cigarette Girl. The study employs Max Weber’s theory of social class and Allan Swingewood’s sociology of literature. The data source is the novel Cigarette Girl, while the data consists of passages and dialogues related to social status and occupations. Data were collected through close reading and note-taking techniques and analysed using a qualitative descriptive method. The findings reveal three social classes: lower, middle, and upper classes. The lower class is represented by cigarette rollers, laborers, and servants, the middle class by teachers and educated workers, and the upper class by business owners and factory proprietors. These occupations reflect the social hierarchy of Javanese society in the 1950s. The study implies that literature can function as a social document that preserves historical representations of social class and occupational structures in society.