Bültmann & Gerriets
What is Morphology?
von Mark Aronoff, Kirsten Fudeman
Verlag: John Wiley & Sons
Reihe: Fundamentals of Linguistics
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ISBN: 978-1-119-71522-1
Auflage: 3. Auflage
Erschienen am 30.09.2022
Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: 336 Seiten

Preis: 33,99 €

Biografische Anmerkung
Inhaltsverzeichnis

Mark Aronoff is Distinguished Professor of Linguistics at Stony Brook University, USA. He is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and previously served as Editor of Language, the Journal of the Linguistic Society of America and as President of the Linguistic Society of America. For Wiley Blackwell he co-edited The Handbook of Linguistics, now in its second edition, with Janie Rees-Miller.
Kirsten Fudeman is former Professor of French at University of Pittsburgh, USA, where she taught medieval French language and literature. She is the author of Vernacular Voices: Language and Identity in Medieval French Jewish Communities.



Preface viii
Acknowledgments xiii
Abbreviations xiv
Remarks on Transcription xvii
The International Phonetic Alphabet xix
About the Companion Website xx
1 Thinking about Morphology and Morphological Analysis 1
1.1 What is Morphology? 1
1.2 Morphemes 2
1.3 Morphology in Action 4
1.4 Background and Beliefs 9
1.5 Introduction to Morphological Analysis 11
1.6 Summary 20
Introduction to Kujamaat Jóola 22
2 Words and Lexemes 32
2.1 What is a Word? 33
2.2 Empirical Tests for Wordhood 36
2.3 Types of Words 38
2.4 Inflection vs. Derivation 45
2.5 Two Approaches to Morphology: Item-and-Arrangement, Item-and-Process 47
2.6 The Lexicon 52
2.7 Summary 54
Kujamaat Jóola Noun Classes 55
3 Morphology and Phonology 69
3.1 Allomorphs 70
3.2 Prosodic Morphology 74
3.3 Primary and Secondary Affixes 77
3.4 Linguistic Exaptation, Leveling, and Analogy 81
3.5 Morphophonology and Secret Languages 87
3.6 Summary 89
Kujamaat Jóola Morphophonology 91
4 Derivation and the Lexicon 103
4.1 The Saussurean Sign 103
4.2 Motivation and Compositionality 104
4.3 Derivation and Structure 116
4.4 Lexicalization 122
4.5 Summary 125
Derivation in Kujamaat Jóola 126
5 Derivation and Semantics 131
5.1 The Polysemy Problem 132
5.2 The Semantics of Derived Lexemes 134
5.3 Summary 141
Derivation and Verbs in Kujamaat Jóola 142
6 Inflection 150
6.1 What is Inflection? 152
6.2 Inflection vs. Derivation 160
6.3 Inventory of Inflectional Morphology Types 163
6.4 Syncretism 170
6.5 Typology 171
6.6 Summary 173
Agreement in Kujamaat Jóola 174
7 Morphology and Syntax 187
7.1 Morphological vs. Syntactic Inflection 188
7.2 Structural Constraints on Morphological Inflection 189
7.3 Inflection and Universal Grammar 191
7.4 Grammatical Function Change 193
7.5 Summary 200
Kujamaat Jóola Verb Morphology 201
8 Morphological Productivity and the Mental Lexicon 217
8.1 What is Morphological Productivity? 218
8.2 Productivity and Structure: Negative Prefixes in English 220
8.3 Degrees of Productivity 221
8.4 Salience and Productivity 226
8.5 Testing Productivity 228
8.6 The Mental Lexicon, Psycholinguistics, and Neurolinguistics 235
8.7 Conclusion 240
9 Computational Morphology 246
9.1 Introduction 247
9.2 Early Work 247
9.3 Problem Specification 249
9.4 Knowledge-based Methods 252
9.5 Data-Driven Methods 260
9.6 Hybrid Models 266
9.7 Resources for Computational Morphology 267
Acknowledgments 268
Further Reading 269
Exercises 270
Glossary 274
References 289
Index 299


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