How much should we Distribute Morphology?

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Studies of morphology, as carried out in practice, focus on a proper subset of bound morphemes which satisfy two properties: their inherent "meanings" are those of general grammatical categories, and they don't receive stress like members of compounds. A question then arises, are there any morphology-specific principles, those of a "Morphological Component," that apply only to such forms? A number of candidates are examined in turn: "Non-maximality," Head Placement, Merger, Alternative Realization, and two Phonological Boundary Conditions. It is argued that the only principles specific to morphology are the last ones, i.e. that properly formulated principles of boundary erasure permit morphology to be completely "distributed" to the syntactic and phonological components.

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詳細情報 詳細情報について

  • CRID
    1572824501863915264
  • NII論文ID
    110004868382
  • NII書誌ID
    AA11200630
  • ISSN
    13434535
  • 本文言語コード
    en
  • データソース種別
    • CiNii Articles
    • KAKEN

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