Introducing Linguistic Morphology
An expanded and updated new edition of this best-selling introduction to linguistic morphology. The text guides the reader from the very first principles of the internal structure of words through to advanced issues of current controversy.
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Edinburgh :
Edinburgh University Press,
2003.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Elements smaller than the word
- Inflection and derivation
- Allomorphs and morphemes
- Recapitulation
- The Morphological Structure of Words
- Word-building processes using affixes
- Suffixes
- Prefixes
- Circumfixes
- Infixes
- Interfixes
- Transfixes
- Reduplication
- Word-building by modification of the base
- Relationships with no change of form
- Cases involving shortening bases
- Processes involving several lexemes
- Alphabet-based formations
- Unique morphs
- Suppletion
- Elaboration
- Defining the Word-Form
- Phonological criteria
- Stress
- Vowel harmony
- Phonological processes
- Morphological and syntactic criteria
- Productivity
- Productivity as a cline
- Productivity as synchronic
- Potential words and productivity in the individual
- Blocking
- Defining the productivity of a process
- So-called limitations on productivity
- So-called semi-productivity
- Measuring productivity
- Inflection and Derivation
- Meaning
- Derivation may cause a change of category
- Inflectional affixes have a regular meaning
- Inflection is productive, derivation semi-productive
- Derivational affixes are nearer the root than inflectional ones
- Derivatives can be replaced by monomorphemic forms
- Inflection uses a closed set of affixes
- Inflectional morphology is what is relevant to the syntax
- A first conclusion
- An alternative conclusion
- What is a Morpheme?
- Problems with morphemes
- Some other views of the morpheme
- From morpheme to morphome.