The gloss of a morpheme is some sort of name for it, a name that alludes to its meaning or function and is insofar mnemonic or, at least, more helpful to the non-specialist than the L1 morph itself. It must therefore have a certain recognition value. Rule 3b therefore requires that given a particular L1 morpheme, its gloss will be the same in all contexts; and no two morphemes of L1 will have the same gloss.

Rule 3. With the exception specified by Rule 22, there is a biunique mapping of individual L1 morphs onto glosses.

Specifically:

  1. There is a symbol or a configuration of symbols in the morphological gloss if there is a morph in the L1 text corresponding to it.
  2. Every L1 morpheme (in all of its variants) has one distinctive gloss identifying it.

This rule requires supplements for certain problematic cases:

The glosses of full synonyms may be distinguished by numbers. E.g. German bevor ‘before1’ and ehe ‘before2’.