Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Ch. 1. Preliminary Terms. 1.2. Separationist Morphology and Lexemes. 1.3. Other Basic Morphological Terms. 1.4. Lexical, Lexemic, and the Lexicon. 1.5. The Morphomic Level
  • Ch. 2. Stems in Latin Verbal Morphology. 2.1. Priscianic Formation of Latin Future, Active Participles. 2.2. Stems in Lexeme-Based Morphology. 2.3. The Stem and Related Notions. 2.4. Stems and the Permanent Lexicon. 2.5. Empty Morphs. 2.6. Semantics and the Latin Basic Stem Types. 2.7. Phonologically Specific Stems
  • Ch. 3. Gender and Nominal Inflectional Classes. 3.1. Terminology. 3.2. Two Simple Examples of the Relation between Gender and Inflectional Class. 3.3. Hebrew, a Language without Nominal Inflectional Classes. 3.4. Latin Nominal Inflection
  • Ch. 4. Gender, Inflection, and Phonological Form in Two Languages of Papua New Guinea: Arapesh and Yimas. 4.1. Arapesh Gender as Revealed through Agreement. 4.2. Inflectional Classes by Themselves. 4.3. Sex, Gender, and Inflectional Class. 4.4. Word Formation. 4.5. Yimas.
  • Ch. 5. Binyanim as Inflectional Classes. 5.1. The Term Binyan and Its Meaning. 5.2. The Hebrew Binyan System. 5.3. The Abstract Nature of the Binyan. 5.4. Qal Stem Templates. 5.5. Varia. 5.6. Aramaic Binyanim. 5.7. Syriac. 5.8. Modern Aramaic. 5.9. Michal: A Semitic Language without Binyanim
  • Ch. 6. Conclusion.