FAHSANU Journal Journal of the Arts /Humanities Volume 1 Number 1, Sept., 2018 1 A CASE FOR CIRCUMFIXATION IN ENGLISH Gift Chidi Onwuta, Ph.D English Unit School of General and Communication Studies Michael Okpara University of Agricuture, Umudike Nigeria giftonwuta@yahoo.com +2347035002859 & Ojinuka, Ngozi Helen English Unit, School of General and Communication Studies, Michael Okpara Univertsity of Agriculture, Umudike, Nigeria ngoriatha@gmail.com +2348037673893 Abstract The study is an attempt to revisit the generalization that circumfixes are far-less common and productive in English than in other languages. The specific objectives of the study include: to highlight and establish the spread of circumfixes in English and determine the distinctive characteristics of circumfixes using descriptive research method. Data were generated through recorded verbal conversations and existing extant literatures in English grammar. Contrary to previous views, the study found that circumfixation is dominant, widespread, productive and a universal phenomenon in English as in many other languages. This affixational process, from the findings, is derivational, class-changing and category-preserving. Circumfixes apply on content (lexical) words and not grammatical words as found in some other languages. The study concludes that earlier generalizations about nonexistence and unproductivity of this affixational process were based on the traditional view of the phenomenon and not from the Binary Branching hypothesis. Keywords: Morphology, Affixation, Circumfixation, English language. Introduction Morphology is one of the levels of language study that investigates how morphemes are concatenated or modified to form new words. This can involve the morphological processes of reduplication, affixation, compounding, backformation, clipping, acronym, etc. The two major divisions of word formation process include: concatenative and non- concatenative morphology. Affixation and compounding are concatenative processes,