Other cranberry morphemes in
English include: •
cob in
cobweb, from the obsolete word '''' ("spider"). • Many elements in English
toponyms, such as "
-ing" ("Reading", "Dorking", "Washington") from an Old English term meaning "the people of..." or "belonging to..." (However, the "
-ing" at the end of words such as "reading", the verb, is not a cranberry morpheme but rather an affixed morpheme.) •
dew in
dewlap, assuming that the particle popularly associated with literal
dew is
folk etymology and not lost. •
Were in
werewolf (literally, 'man-wolf') ==Emergence==