Generative Morphology

Voorkant
Walter de Gruyter, 18 okt 2011 - 247 pagina's

The architecture of the human language faculty has been one of the main foci of the linguistic research of the last half century. This branch of linguistics, broadly known as Generative Grammar, is concerned with the formulation of explanatory formal accounts of linguistic phenomena with the ulterior goal of gaining insight into the properties of the 'language organ'. The series comprises high quality monographs and collected volumes that address such issues. The topics in this series range from phonology to semantics, from syntax to information structure, from mathematical linguistics to studies of the lexicon.

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Inhoudsopgave

Interplay between morphological rules
101
2 Derivation and Inflection
102
3 Compounding and Derivation
115
31 The Extended Ordering Hypothesis in English
116
32 The Extended Ordering Hypothesis in Italian
119
4 Compounding and Inflection
122
5 Some bordeline cases
127
52 Evaluative Suffixes
131

Lexicalist morphology
17
11 Consequences for derivation
20
12 Word stress rules
22
2 Prolegomena to a theory of word formation Halle 1973
23
21 The model
24
22 Relevance of Halles theory
31
23 Some criticisms of Halles model
32
3 Summary
34
Word formation in generative morphology
37
11 The Word Based Hypothesis
40
2 Word Formation Rules
42
3 Restrictions on Word Formation Rules
44
32 The output
51
4 Summary
54
Readjustment rules
57
11 Truncation Rules
58
12 Allomorphy Rules
60
2 Justification of Readjustment Rules
61
21 Readjustment Rules and Word Formation Rules
63
22 Readjustment Rules and Phonological Rules
66
3 Summary
67
Lexical formatives and word formation rules
71
11 Learned stems
75
2 Representation
76
22 Formatives of the lexical component
78
23 Class I and Class II Affixes
81
3 Compounding
90
32 The IS A Condition
92
33 Boundaries in compounds and the Extended Level Ordering Hypothesis
93
4 Well formedness conditions
95
5 Summary
97
6 Summary
133
Constraining word formation rules
137
11 The Modified Unitary Base Hypothesis
138
12 N V A + suffix
140
13 N V + ata
141
14 N V + ino
143
15 One suffix or two?
144
2 The Binary Branching Hypothesis
146
21 Parasynthetics
147
22 The suffix istico
150
3 The Ordering Hypothesis
151
4 The No Phrase Constraint
154
5 Blocking
156
51 Productivity
157
52 Blocking and the Blocking Rule
158
6 Summary
163
Morphology and syntax
167
11 Locality
169
12 Subcategorization Frames
178
2 Clitics
183
3 Interaction between Morphology and Syntax
185
31 Word Bar Theory
186
32 Inflection
191
4 Summary and conclusions
197
Symbols and Abbreviations
201
Subject Index
205
Affix Index
211
Word Index
215
Index of Names
231
Bibliography
233
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