Yearbook of morphology

Bibliographic Information

Yearbook of morphology

Geert Booij and Jaap van Marle (eds.)

Foris Pub., 1988-

  • 1988
  • 1988 : pbk
  • 2 (1989)
  • 2 (1989) : pbk
  • 3 (1990) : pbk
  • 1991
  • 1992
  • 1993
  • 1994
  • 1995
  • 1996
  • 1997
  • 1998
  • 1999
  • 2000
  • 2001
  • 2002
  • 2003
  • 2004
  • 2005

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Note

Appears annually

Vol. 1991-2003 published: Dordrecht, The Netherlands ; Boston : Kluwer Academic Pub

Vol. 2004- published: Dordrecht, The Netherlands ; Boston : Springer

Includes bibliographical references

Description and Table of Contents

Volume

1991 ISBN 9780792314165

Description

MARK ARONOFF The articles included in this section represent recent research on morpholog ical classes which has been independently performed by a number of investi gators. This work was presented at a symposium that was organized as part of the 1990-1991 annual meeting of the Linguistic Society of America in Chicago in January 1991. Our aim in presenting this work is twofold: on the one hand, we would like to encourage others interested in morphology to pursue the types of research that we present. This is especially important in the study of morphological classes, which, while they are widespread among the languages of the world, are also highly diverse and often quite complex. On the other hand, we hope to convince researchers in adjacent areas to provide a place for autonomous morphology in their general picture of the workings of language and to pay closer attention to the intricacies of the interactionbetweenmorphologyand theseareas.

Table of Contents

Theme 'Morphological Classes' Guest Editor: Mark Aronoff.- Syntactically Arbitrary Inflectional Morphology.- Noun Classes in Arapesh.- The Latvian Declension.- Formal Properties of the Conjugations in Modern Aramaic.- The Form Classes of Spanish Substantives.- Morphological Classes and Grammatical Organization.- Theme 'Productivity'.- Quantitative Aspects of Morphological Productivity.- The Relationship between Morphological Productivity and Frequency: A Comment on Baayen's Performance-Oriented Conception of Morphological Productivity.- Constraining Psycholinguistic Models of Morphological Processing and Representation: The Role of Productivity.- Scalar Productivity and -lily Adverbs.- Other Articles.- Morphemic Circumscription.- On the Theoretical Status of Position Class Restrictions on Inflectional Affixes.- Book Reviews.- Renato Oniga,I composti nominali latini: una morfologia generativa.- Yakov Malkiel, Diachronic Problems in Phonosymbolism. Edita and Inedita, 1979-1988.- Book Notices.- Wolfgang U. Dressler, Hans C. Luschutzky, Oskar E. Pfeiffer, and John R. Rennison (eds.), Contemporary Morphology.- Soledad Varela Ortega, Fundamentos de Morfologia.- Journal of the English Linguistic Society, Vol. 7 (1990).- Publications Received.- Notes To Contributors.
Volume

1992 ISBN 9780792319375

Description

A revival of interest in morphology has taken place during recent years and the subject is seen now as a relatively autonomous subdiscipline of linguistics. As one of the important areas of theoretical research in formal linguistics, morphology has attracted linguists to investigate its relations to syntax, semantics, phonology, psycholinguistics and language change. The aim of the Yearbook of Morphology, therefore, is to support and enforce the upswing of morphological research and to give an overview of the current issues and debates at the heart of this revival.

Table of Contents

Inflectional rules in children's grammars: evidence from German participles.- Suffixal Rivalry: a case study in Irish nominalisations.- Verbal prefixation in Dutch: thematic evidence for conversion.- Wackernagel affixes: evidence from Balto-Slavic.- Head-operations in Spanish morphology.- Position classes and morphological theory.- On frequency, transparency and productivity.- Morphology without word-internal constituents: a review of Stephen R. Anderson's AMorphous Morphology.- Morphological non-separation revisited: a review of R. Lieber's Deconstructing Morphology.- Book reviews.- Book notices.- Publications Received.- Notes to Contributors.
Volume

1993 ISBN 9780792324942

Description

Recent years have seen a revival of interest in morphology. The Yearbook of Morphology series supports and enforces this upswing of morphological research and gives an overview of the current issues and debates at the heart of this revival. The Yearbook of Morphology 1993 focuses on prosodic morphology, i.e. the interaction between morphological and prosodic structure, on the semantics of word formation, and on a number of related issues in the realm of inflection: the structure of paradigms, the relation between inflection and word formation, and patterns of language change with respect to inflection. There is also discussion of the relevance of the notion `level ordering' for morphological generalizations. All theoretical and historical linguists, morphologists, and phonologists will want to read this volume.

Table of Contents

  • Back-Formation, Cross-Formation, and `Bracketing Paradoxes' in Paradigmatic Morphology
  • T. Becker. Against Split Morphology
  • G. Booij. Verbal Prefixes in Dutch: a Study in Lexical Conceptual Structure
  • R. Lieber, H. Baayen. Generalized Alignment
  • J.J. McCarthy, A. Prince. Resistance to Erosion in American Dutch Inflection
  • C. Smits. Why Mandarin Morphology is not Stratum-Ordered
  • R. Sproat, C. Shih. Verbs in Italian Morphology
  • I. Vogel. Short Notice: Morphological Adaptation
  • J. van Marle. Book Notices: Peter Matthews, Morphology: An Introduction to Word Structure.Second Edition.
  • M. Aronoff. Sergio Scalise (ed.), The Morphology of Compounding.
  • G. Booij. Yakov Malkiel, Diachronic Studies in Lexicology, Affixation and Phonology.
  • F. Rainer.
Volume

1994 ISBN 9780792332442

Description

Recent years have seen a revival of interest in morphology. The Yearbook of Morphology series supports and enforces this upswing of morphological research and gives an overview of the current issues and debates at the heart of this revival. The Yearbook of Morphology 1994 focuses on prosodic morphology, i.e. the interaction between morphological and prosodic structure, on the semantics of word formation, and on a number of related issues in the realm of inflection: the structure of paradigms, the relation between inflection and word formation, and patterns of language change with respect to inflection. There is also discussion of the relevance of the notion `level ordering' for morphological generalizations. All theoretical and historical linguists, morphologists, and phonologists will want to read this book.

Table of Contents

  • Theme: Mechanisms of Morphological Change. The growth of affixes in morphological reanalysis
  • M. Haspelmath. The creation of morphological zeroes
  • H. Koch. Affixation and morphological longevity
  • M. Mithun. Other Articles. The theoretical relevance of pre and protomorphology in language acquisition
  • W.U. Dressler, A. Karpf. Gender, animacy, and declensional class assignment: a unified account for Russian
  • N.M. Fraser, G.G. Corbett. Evaluative affixes in Italian
  • D.J. Napoli, W. Reynolds. Compounds: a view from suffixation and a-structure alteration
  • H. Oshita. Prosodic constraints in the derivational morphology of Italian
  • S. Peperkamp. The uniformity of head marking in inflectional morphology
  • G. Stump. Book Notices. Franz Rainer: `Spanische Wortbildungslehre'
  • G. Booij. Jan Don: `Morphological Conversion'
  • G. Booij. Soledad Varela (ed.): `La formacion de palabras'
  • G. Booij. Thomas Stolz: `Sekundare Flexionsbildung'
  • M. Haspelmath. Grazia Crocco Galeas: `Gli etnici italiani. Studio di morfologia naturale'
  • H.C. Luschutzky. Wim de Haas & Mieke Trommelen: `Morfologisch handboek van het Nederlands'
  • J. van Marle.
Volume

1995 ISBN 9780792339847

Description

A revival of interest in morphology has occurred during recent years. The aim of the Yearbook of Morphology series is to support and enforce this upswing of morphological research and to give an overview of the current issues and debates at the heart of this revival. The Yearbook of Morphology 1995 focuses on an important issue in the current morphological debate: the relation between inflection and word formation. What are the criteria for their demarcation, in which ways do they interact and how is this distinction acquired by children? The papers presented here concur in rejecting the `split morphology hypothesis' that claims that inflection and word formation belong to different components of the grammar. This volume also deals with the marked phenomenon of subtractive morphology and its theoretical implications. Theoretical and historical linguists, morphologists, phonologists and psycholinguists interested in linguistic issues will find this book of interest.

Table of Contents

  • Inherent Versus Contextual Inflection and the Split Morphology Hypothesis
  • G. Booij. The Inverse Morphology of Plains Cree (Algonquian)
  • R. Fabri. Word-Class-Changing Inflection and Morphological Theory
  • M. Haspelmath. The Unity of Morphology: on the Interwovenness of the Derivational and Inflectional Dimension of the Word
  • J. van Marle. Inflection Inside Derivation: Evidence from Spanish and Portuguese
  • F. Rainer. Minimalist Morphology: the Role of Paradigms
  • D. Wunderlich. Compounding and Inflection in German Child Language
  • H. Clahsen, et al. Zero Morphology and Constraint Interaction: Subtraction and Epenthesis in German Dialects
  • C. Golston, R. Wiese. Subtractive Morphology and Morpheme Identity in Arabic Pausal Forms
  • R.D. Hoberman. Perceptual Salience and Affix Order: Noun Plurals as Input to Word Formation
  • C. Chapman. Papers from the 4th International Morphology Meeting
  • G. Booij, F. Kiefer. Clitics, a Comprehensive Bibliography
  • J. Nevis. Natural Morphology, Perspectives for the Nineties
  • L. Tonelli, W.U. Dressler. Opposizioni direzionali e prefissazione
  • F. Rainer.
Volume

1996 ISBN 9780792345633

Description

A revival of interest in morphology has occurred during recent years. Since 1988, the Yearbook of Morphology book series has proven to be an eminent platform for the growth of morphological research, containing articles on topics that are central in the current theoretical debates. The Yearbook of Morphology 1996 focuses on the relationship between morphology and psycholinguistics. Basic questions such as the following are discussed. To what extent does the morphological structure of a word play a role in its perception and production? Are regular complex words created anew each time they are used, or are they stored in the lexicon? The relevant evidence comes from a variety of European languages. Another important theme in this yearbook is the degree of autonomy of morphology: in which respect does it differ from other modules of the grammar? The present yearbook also contains articles on periphrasis, the nature of inflectional morphology and syncretism in derivational morphology. Audience: Theoretical and historical linguists, morphologists, phonologists and psycholinguists will find this book of interest.

Table of Contents

  • Morphology: Why, How, When, When Not, and Why Not? H. Baayen, R. Schreuder. Morphology in Real Time
  • F. Anshen, M. Aronoff. Effects of Semantic Markedness in the Processing of Regular Nominal Singulars and Plurals in Italian
  • H. Baayen, et al. Autonomous Morphology and Paradigmatic Relations
  • G. Booij. Accessing and Naming Suffixed Pseudo-Words
  • C. Burani, et al. The Representation of Participles in the German Mental Lexicon: Evidence for the Dual-Mechanism Model
  • H. Clahsen. Transfer in a Connectionist Model of the Acquisition of Morphology
  • M. Gasser. Morphology, Modality, and Lexical Architecture
  • W. Marslen-Wilson, et al. Morpheme Frequency in Speech Production: Testing WEAVER
  • A. Roelofs. Other Articles: Paradigms, Periphrases and Pronominal Inflection: A Feature-Based Account
  • K. Boerjars, et al. A Morphemic Account of a Syncretism in Russian Deverbal Nominalizations
  • L. Sadler, et al. Template Morphology and Inflectional Morphology
  • G.T. Stump. Derivational Paradigms
  • L. Bauer. Book Notices: Wolfgang U. Dressler and Cristina Burani (eds.), Crossdisciplinary Approaches to Morphology
  • G. Booij. Laura A. Janda, Back from the Brink: A Study of How Relic Forms in Languages Serve as Source Material for Analogical Extension
  • M. Haspelmath.
Volume

1997 ISBN 9780792350927

Description

This text focuses on the relationship between morphology and other modules of the grammar, especially phonology, syntax and semantics. Among the basic questions discussed is: how does morphology differ from other modules of the grammar, syntax in particular? semantics constrain formal variation in morphology? The evidence adduced is derived from a variety of languages. Theoretical, descriptive and historical linguists, morphologists, phonologists, and psycholinguists shoul find this book of value.

Table of Contents

  • How Lexical Semantics Constrains Inflectional Allomorphy
  • A. Carstairs-McCarthy. Verbalizing Suffixes and the Structure of the Polish Verb
  • E. Czaykowska-Higgins. The Morphosyntactic Reality of Phonological Form
  • L.M. Dobrin. Prosodic Misalignment and Reduplication
  • L.J. Downing. The Theoretical Status of Morphologically Conditioned Phonology: A Case Study of Dominance Effects
  • S. Inkelas. The Interaction of Noun Incorporation and Applicative Formation in Ainu
  • L. Kaiser. Cyclic and Noncyclic Phonological Effects in a Declarative Grammar
  • C.O. Orgun. The Polysemy of -ize Derivatives: On the Role of Semantics in Word Formation
  • I. Plag. Morphology-Syntax Interface
  • A-N Compounds vs. A-N Constructs in Modern Greek
  • A. Ralli, M. Stavrou. Complex Denominal Verbs in German
  • B. Stiebels. Book Notices: Gracia Crocco Galeas, Metafora Morfologica. Saggio di Morfologia Naturale
  • G. Booij. Georgette Dal, Grammaire du suffixe -et(te)
  • J. van Marle. Crhistiane Dalton-Puffer, The French Influence on Middle English Morphology. A Corpus-Based Study of Derivation
  • J. van Marle. Siebren van Dijk, Noun Incorporation in Frisian
  • G. Booij. Wolfgang U. Dressler (ed.), Studies in Pre- and Protomorphology
  • G. Booij. Alan Ford, Rajendra Singh, Gita Martohardjono, Pace Panini. Toward a Word-Based Theory of Morphology
  • G. Booij. Sylvia A. Lohken, Deutsche Wortprosodie. Abschwagungs- und Tilgungsvorgange
  • G. Booij. Jorma Luutonen, The Variation of Morpheme Order in Mari Declension
  • J. van Marle. Tapani Salminen (ed.), Typological and Historical Studies in Language by Mikko Korhonen. A Memorial Volume published on the 60th Anniversary of his Birth
  • G. Booij. Rajendra Singh and Rama Kant, Hindi Morphology. A Word-Based Description
  • G. Booij.
Volume

1998 ISBN 9780792360353

Description

A revival of interest in morphology has occurred during recent years. The Yearbook of Morphology series, published since 1988, has proven to be an eminent support for this upswing of morphological research, since it contains articles on topics which are central in the current theoretical debates which are frequently referred to. The Yearbook of Morphology 1998 focuses on two issues: the position of inflection in the grammar, and the interaction of morphology with phonology, in particular the problem of allomorphy. In addition, this volume presents a study of the relation between transposition and argument structure, a declarative model of word formation applied to conversion in German, an analysis of Dutch verbal compounds and a study of the semantic aspects of nominalization. The relevant evidence comes from a wide variety of languages. Theoretical, descriptive, and historical linguists, morphologists, phonologists, and psycholinguists will find this book of interest.

Table of Contents

  • Prototypical inflection: implications for typology
  • G.G. Corbett. The status of tense within inflection
  • M. Mithun. On the boundaries of inflection and syntax: Greek pronominal clitics and particles
  • I. Philippaki-Warburton, V. Spyropoulos. Transpositions and argument structure
  • A. Spencer. On Italian derivatives with antesuffixal glides
  • A.M. Thornton. Other papers. The nonuniform structure of Dutch N-V compounds
  • P. Ackema. Lenition in Hessian: cluster reduction and `subtractive plurals'
  • D.J. Holsinger, P.D. Houseman. Nominalizations in a calculus of lexical semantic representations
  • R. Lieber, H. Baayen. A declarative approach to conversion into verbs in German
  • M. Neef. Phonological constraints on English word formation
  • R. Raffelsiefen. Book review. Review of Packard (1998): New Approaches to Chinese Word Formation
  • R. Sproat.
Volume

1999 ISBN 9780792366317

Description

A revival of interest in morphology has occurred during recent years. The Yearbook of Morphology series, published since 1988, has proven to be an eminent support for this upswing of morphological research, since it contains articles on topics which are central in the current theoretical debates which are frequently referred to. The Yearbook of Morphology 1999 focuses on diachronic morphology, and shows, in a number of articles by renowned specialists, how complicated morphological systems develop in the course of time. In addition, this volume deals with a number of hotly debated issues in theoretical morphology: its interaction with phonology (including Optimality Theory), the relation between inflection and word formation, and the formal modeling of inflectional systems. A special feature of this volume is an article on morphology in sign language, a very new and exciting area of research in linguistics. The relevant evidence comes from a wide variety of languages, amongst which Germanic, Romance, and Slavic languages are prominent. Audience: Theoretical, descriptive, and historical linguists, morphologists, phonologists, and psycholinguists will find this book of interest.

Table of Contents

  • Theme: Diachronic Morphology. Guest editor: Martin Haspelmath. Umlaut as signans and signatum: synchronic and diachronic aspects
  • A. Carstairs-McCarthy. What sort of thing is a derivational affix? Diachronic evidence from Romanian and Spanish suffixes
  • M. Maiden. The development of `junk'. Irregularization strategies of HAVE and SAY in the Germanic languages
  • D. Nubling. Paradigm organization and lexical connections in the development of the Italian passato remoto
  • E. Magni. On useful darkness: loss and destruction of transparency by linguistic change, borrowing, and word creation
  • E. Ronneberger-Sibold. Other articles. The representation of prefixed forms in the Italian lexicon: Evidence from the distribution of intervocalic [s] and [z] in northern Italian
  • M. Baroni. On inherent inflection feeding derivation in Polish
  • B. Cetnarowska. The processing of interfixed German compounds
  • W.U. Dressler, et al. Word formation rules in a default inheritance framework: a Network Morphology account of Russian personal nouns
  • A. Hippisley. Stem selection and OT
  • S.G. Lapointe. Verb classifiers as noun incorporation in Israeli sign language
  • I. Meir.
Volume

2000 ISBN 9780792370826

Description

A revival of interest in morphology has occurred during recent years. The Yearbook of Morphology series, published since 1988, has proven to be an eminent support for this upswing of morphological research, since it contains articles on topics which are central in the current theoretical debates which are frequently referred to. The Yearbook of Morphology 2000 focuses on the relation between morphology and syntax. First, a number of articles is devoted to the ways in which morphological features can be expressed in the grammar of natural languages, both by morphological and syntactic devices. This also raises the more general issue of how we have to conceive of the relation between form and (grammatical) meaning. Several formalisms for inflectional paradigms are proposed. In addition, this volume deals with the demarcation between morphology and syntax: to which extent can syntactic principles and generalizations be used for a proper account of the morphology of a language? The languages discussed are Potawatomi, Latin, Greek, Romanian, West-Greenlandic, and German. A special feature of this volume is a section devoted to the analysis of the morphosyntax of a number of Austronesian languages, which are also relevant for deepening our insights into the relation between our morphology and syntax. Audience: Theoretical, descriptive, and historical linguists, morphologists, phonologists, computational linguists, and psycholinguists will find this book of interest.

Table of Contents

  • Papers from the 2nd Mediterranean Morphology Meeting, Malta, 10-12 September 1999 (guest editor: R. Fabri). On some issues in morphological exponence
  • S. Anderson. Lexeme-based separationist morphology: evidence from the history of Greek deverbal abstracts
  • G. Horrocks, M. Stavrou. Haplology involving morphologically bound and free elements: evidence from Romanian
  • A. Ortmann, A. Popescu. Syntax as an exponent of morphological features
  • L. Sadler, A. Spencer. The morphosyntax of Austronesian languages (guest editor: M. Klamer). Phrasal emotion predicates in three languages of Eastern Indonesia
  • M. Klamer. Linking in Tagalog: Argument encoding determined by the aspectual properties of arguments
  • A. Latrouite. Pronouns and morphology: undergoer subject clauses in Indonesian
  • S. Musgrave. Other articles. Dalabon pronominal prefixes and the typology of syncretism: a Network Morphology analysis
  • N. Evans, et al. A correspondence-theoretic analysis of Dalabon transitive paradigms
  • D. Wunderlich. Pattern analogy vs. word-internal syntactic structure in West-Greenlandic
  • S. Neuvel. Copulative compounds: a closer look at the distinction between morphology and syntax
  • S. Olsen. Reviews. Review of Lunella Mereu (ed.), Boundaries of morphology and syntax
  • A.R. Luis. Review of Ingo Plag, Morphological Productivity. Structural constrains in English word formation
  • A. Spencer. Book Notices.
Volume

2001 ISBN 9781402007248

Description

The Yearbook of Morphology 2001 focuses on the notion of productivity, the role of analogy in coining new words, and constraints on affix ordering in a number of Germanic languages are investigated. Other topics include the necessity and the role of the paradigm in morphological analyses, the relation between form and meaning in morphology, the accessibility of the internal morphological structure of complex words, and the interaction of morphology and prosody in truncation processes.

Table of Contents

  • Morphological selection and representation modularity
  • P. Ackema, A. Neeleman. Syncretism without paradigms: remarks on Williams 1981, 1984
  • J. Bobaljik. Defining 'word' in Modern Greek: a response to Philippaki-Warburton & Spyropoulos 1999
  • B.D. Joseph. Reconsidering Bracket Erasure
  • C. Orhan Orgun, S. Inkelas. Morphological and syntactic paradigms: arguments for a theory of paradigm linkage
  • G. Stump. Theme: Affix ordering and productivity (Guest editor: Harald Baayen). Affix ordering and productivity: a blend of phonotactics and prosody, frequency, and lexical strata
  • H. Baayen. Prosodic constraints on stacking up affixes
  • G. Booij. Parsing and productivity
  • J. Hay, H. Baayen. A note on the function of Dutch linking elements
  • A. Krott, et al. Neoclassical word formation in German
  • A. Luedeling, et al. The role of selectional restrictions, phonotactics, and parsing in constraining suffix ordering in English
  • I. Plag.
Volume

2002 ISBN 9781402011504

Description

The Yearbook of Morphology 2002 discusses the morphology of a variety of pidgin and Creole languages which appear to have much more morphology than traditionally assumed. Other topics include the morphological use of truncation for the coinage of proper names in Germanic and Romance languages, the way affixes are combined and ordered in complex words, and the complex linguistic principles behind these orderings.

Table of Contents

  • The morphology of creole languages. Introduction: the morphology of creole languages
  • I. Plag. Pidgin inflectional morphology and its implications for creole morphology
  • P. Bakker. The emergence of productive morphology in creole languages: the case of Haitian Creole
  • C. Lefebvre. How transparent is creole morphology? A study of Early Sranan word formation
  • M. Braun, I. Plag. Tonal morphology in a creole: high-tone raising in Saramaccan serial verb constructions
  • J. Good. Truncation. Monosyllabicity in prosodic morphology: the case of truncated personal names in English
  • S. Lappe. Morphology in truncation: the role of the Spanish desinence
  • I. Roca, E. Feliu. Affix ordering. Suffix ordering in Bantu: a morphocentric approach
  • L.M. Hyman. The interaction of morphology and syntax in affix order
  • J. Trommer.
Volume

2003 ISBN 9781402012723

Description

The Yearbook of Morphology series, published since 1988, has proven to be an eminent support for the current upswing of morphological research and has set a standard for morphological research. The 2003 volume deals with the phenomenon of complex predicates consisting of a verb preceded by a preverb, presents historical evidence on the change of preverbal elements into prefixes, and discusses morphological parsing, and the role of paradigmatical relations in analogical change. It is relevant to theoretical, descriptive, and historical linguists, morphologists, phonologists, computational linguists, and psycholinguists.

Table of Contents

  • Preverbs: an introduction
  • G. Booij, A. van Kemenade. Aspectual contrasts and lexeme derivation in Estonian: a realization-based morphological perspective
  • F. Ackerman. Preverbs and particles in Old French
  • M. Dufresne, et al. Preverbs and their origins in Georgian and Udi
  • A. Harris. Particles and prefixes in Dutch and English
  • A. van Kemenade, B. Los. Preverbs, argument linking and verb semantics: German prefixes and particles
  • A. McIntyre. Preverbs as an open word class in Northern Australian languages: synchronic and diachronic correlates
  • E. Schultze-Berndt. Moved preverbs in German: displaced or misplaced? J. Zeller. Other articles. Distribution-driven morpheme discovery: a computational/experimental study
  • M. Baroni. Morphological `gangs': constraints on paradigmatic relations in analogical change
  • C. Fehringer. Book reviews. J. Zeller (2001), Particle verbs and local domains
  • G. Booij. Morphology 2000. Selected Papers from the 9th Morphology Meeting, Vienna, 24-28 February 2000, edited by S. Bendjaballah, et al
  • G. Booij.
Volume

2004 ISBN 9781402028991

Description

A revival of interest in morphology has occurred during recent years. The Yearbook of Morphology, published since 1988, has proven to be an eminent support for this upswing of morphological research, since it contains articles on topics which are central in the current theoretical debates which are frequently referred to. In the Yearbook of Morphology 2004 a number of papers is devoted to the topic 'morphology and linguistic typology'. These papers were presented at the Fourth Mediterranean Morphology Meeting in Catania, in September 2003. Within the context of this denominator, a number of issues are discussed wich bear upon universals and typology. These issues include: universals and diachrony, sign language, syncretism, periphrasis, etc.

Table of Contents

Morphology and Linguistic Typology. Papers from the Fourth Mediterranean Morphology Meeting, Catania, 22-24 September 2003. STEPHEN R. ANDERSON / Morphological Universals and Diachrony MARK ARONOFF, IRIT MEIR, CAROL PADDEN, WENDY SANDLER / Morphological Universals and the Sign Language Type MATTHEW BAERMAN / Typology and the Formal Modelling of Syncretism BERTHOLD CRYSMANN / An Inflectional Approach to Hausa Final Vowel Shortening PAUL KIPARSKY / Blocking and Periphrasis in Inflectional Paradigms MARTIN MAIDEN / Morphological Autonomy and Diachrony Other Articles ANA LUIS and ANDREW SPENCER / A Paradigm Function Account of 'Mesoclisis' in European Portuguese GEREON MUELLER / Syncretism and Iconicity in Icelandic Noun Declension: A Distributed Morphology Approach ROLF NOYER / A Constraint on Interclass Syncretism Discussion Note JONATHAN DAVID BOBALJIK / Itelmen Plural Diminutives: A Belated Reply to Perlmutter 1988 Book Notices R. Harald Baayen and Robert Schreuder (eds.), Morphological Structure in Language Processing (Geert Booij) George Smith, Phonological Words and Derivation in German (Geert Booij)
Volume

2005 ISBN 9781402040658

Description

A revival of interest in morphology has occurred during recent years. The periodical Yearbook of Morphology, published since 1988, has proven to be an eminent support for this upswing of morphological research, and has shown that morphology is central to present-day linguistic theorizing. In the Yearbook of Morphology 2005 a number of important theoretical issues are discussed: the role of inflectional paradigms in morphological analysis, the differences between words and affixes, and the adequacy of competing models of word structure. In addition, the role of phonological factors in shaping complex words is discussed. Evidence for particular positions defended in this volume is taken from a wide variety of languages. This volume is of interest to those working in theoretical, descriptive and historical linguistics, morphologists, phonologists, computational linguists, and psycholinguists. Beginning with Volume 16 (2006) the Yearbook of Morphology continues as a journal with the title: Morphology. This is the only journal entirely devoted to the study of linguistic morphology. The journal is available online as well as in print. Visit the journal at: www.springer.com/11525 or click on the link in the top right hand corner.

Table of Contents

Articles James P. Blevins / Word-based declensions in Estonian Hans-Olav Enger / Do affixes have meanings? Janet Grijzenhout and Martina Penke / On the interaction of phonology and morphology in German Andrew Koontz-Garboden / On the typology of state/change of state alternations Christian Lehmann / Pleonasm and hypercharacterization Mary Paster / Pulaar verbal extension and phonologically driven affix order Andrea Sims / Declension hopping in dialectal Croatian: Two predictions of frequency Gregory T. Stump / Referrals and morphemes in Sora verb inflection Discussion: Paradigm Function Morphology Andrew Carstairs-McCarthy / Affixes, stems and allomorphic conditioning in Paradigm Function Morphology Gregory T. Stump / Some criticism of Carstairs-McCarthy's conclusions Book notices Peter Arkadiev / Paul Boucher (ed.), Many Morphologies Claudio Iacobini / Pierre Corbin (ed.), Lexique 16 Geert Booij / Laurie Bauer, A Glossary of Morphology Geert Booij / Piet van Sterkenburg (ed.), Linguistics Today - Facing a Greater Challenge Book information Proceedings of the 4th Mediterranean Morphology Meeting, Catania, 21-23 September 2004

by "Nielsen BookData"

Details

  • NCID
    BA09825306
  • ISBN
    • 9067653764
    • 9067653756
    • 9067654442
    • 9067654450
    • 9067655058
    • 0792314166
    • 0792319370
    • 0792324943
    • 079233244X
    • 0792339843
    • 0792345630
    • 0792350928
    • 0792360354
    • 079236631X
    • 0792370821
    • 1402007248
    • 1402011504
    • 1402012721
    • 1402028997
    • 9781402040658
  • Country Code
    ne
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    Dordrecht, The Netherlands
  • Pages/Volumes
    v.
  • Size
    24-25 cm
  • Classification
  • Subject Headings
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