Answer:
<u>A root, a prefix, and an inflection</u>
Explanation:
A word is composed of one or more morphemes, which are the smallest unit of the meaning of a word but that can not stand on its own.
The morphemes may be divided into root words (which hold the most basic meaning of a word) prefixes (Added before a root word) and inflections or suffixes (Added at the end of a root word). The word "<u>information</u>" have all those types of morphemes:
The prefix: <u><em>in</em></u>, which means not, no, in or on (also found in the words <em>insecure, invalid, inscribe</em>)
The root word: <u><em>form</em></u>, which means ‘shape,’ (found in other words like <em>deformed, formality</em>)
The inflection: <u><em>ation</em></u>, which means action or process (found in words like <em>differentiation</em> and <em>personification</em>)