Generative MorphologyCinnaminson, N.J., 1984 - 237 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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Pagina 93
... compounds , and thus allows us to avoid redundancy . Specifically , without this condition it would be necessary to ... compounds that satisfy both the " IS A " Condition and the Variable R Condition are semantically transparent or ...
... compounds , and thus allows us to avoid redundancy . Specifically , without this condition it would be necessary to ... compounds that satisfy both the " IS A " Condition and the Variable R Condition are semantically transparent or ...
Pagina 121
... compounds that correspond essentially to those which Allen ( 1978 ) calls " strict compounds " and " loose compounds " . The criteria for the distinction in Italian are basically the same as those proposed by Allen for Welsh . That is ...
... compounds that correspond essentially to those which Allen ( 1978 ) calls " strict compounds " and " loose compounds " . The criteria for the distinction in Italian are basically the same as those proposed by Allen for Welsh . That is ...
Pagina 124
... compounds with derived words . While such an identifi- cation may seem justified in English on certain structural grounds , the same is not true for all languages . That is , in English the head of a compound is always the right - most ...
... compounds with derived words . While such an identifi- cation may seem justified in English on certain structural grounds , the same is not true for all languages . That is , in English the head of a compound is always the right - most ...
Inhoudsopgave
Word formation as transformations | 8 |
Summary | 14 |
Prolegomena to a theory of word formation Halle 1973 | 23 |
Copyright | |
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abstract according adjectives Allen allomorphy apply argument Aronoff Aronoff's proposal Base Hypothesis Blocking Rule Booij boundary change the syntactic Chapter Chomsky Class clitics complex word counterexamples criticism derivation and inflection derivational rules derived words Dictionary discussed Dutch element English evaluative suffixes example existent words fact formedness furthermore given grammar Halle's Infl inflected word inflection Inflection Rules inflectional morphemes internal structure Italian languages lexical category lexical component Lexical Insertion lexical items lexical morphology Lexicalist Hypothesis lexicon Lieber linguistic List of Morphemes loose compounds meaning morphological component morphological rules Muysken nouns operate Ordering Hypothesis output Output Hypothesis parasynthetics phonological rules phrase phrase structure rules plural possible Pre+ prefix problem processes productive Readjustment Rules relation restrictions RR's Scalise seen Selkirk semantic sentences Siegel specific stems stress rules subcategorization frame suffix syntactic category transitive verbs WFR's Word Formation Rules X-bar theory Zwanenburg