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Morphology and its demarcations : Selected papers from the 11th Morphology meeting, Vienna, February 2004.
Title:
Morphology and its demarcations : Selected papers from the 11th Morphology meeting, Vienna, February 2004.
Author:
Dressler, Wolfgang U.
ISBN:
9789027294395
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (334 pages)
Contents:
MORPHOLOGY AND ITS DEMARCATIONS -- Editorial page -- Title page -- LCC data -- Table of contents -- Adresses of authors and editors -- Introduction -- Notes -- Wichita word formation -- 1. Introduction -- 2. An introduction to Wichita -- 3. Locatives: Derivational substitutes for adpositions -- 4. Wh-S complements of `not to know': NP information in the verb -- 5. The Wichita definite article: A verbal affix -- Notes -- References -- Morphology in the wrong place -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Definition and demarcation -- 3. Previous approaches -- 4. Cross-reference by ditropic clitics -- 4.1. Kugu Nganhcara pronominal clitics -- 4.2. Djinang/Djinba reduced pronouns -- 4.3. Kherwarian pronominal suffixes -- 4.4. Udi subject person markers -- 4.5. Northern Talysh clitic pronouns -- 5. Clause-chaining ditropic clitics -- 5.1. Ingush clause chaining -- 5.2. Northern Mansi conditionals -- 6. Ditropic clitics in noun phrases -- 6.1. Kwakwala (Kwakiutl) determiners -- 6.2. Yagua object doubling -- 6.3. Greek pronominal possession -- 7. Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- Notes -- References -- Clitics or affixes? -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The problem stated -- 3. Criteria for distinguishing clitics from affixes -- 3.1. Syntactic criteria -- 3.2. Morphonological criteria -- 3.3. Criteria proposed in Zwicky & Pullum 1983 -- 4. Conclusion -- Acknowledgments -- Notes -- References -- The demarcation of morphology and syntax -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The assumed word properties of SCVs -- 3. ``Compositional idioms''? -- 4. The diachrony of SCVs -- 5. Conclusions -- Notes -- References -- When clitics become affixes, where do they come to rest? -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Frequency effects -- 3. Word order -- 4. Processing factors -- 5. Summary and conclusions -- References -- APPENDIX: Texts used in the study -- Grammatical hybrids -- 1. Introduction.

2. The serial verb construction -- 3. Polyfunctionality -- 4. A typological profile -- 5. Serialization, compounding, and derivation -- 6. The Southeast Asia sprachbund -- 7. Grammaticalization chains -- 8. Accounting for polyfunctionalism -- 9. Conclusions -- Abbreviations -- Notes -- References -- The borderline between derivation and compounding -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The diachronic permeability of the borderline -- 2.1. Moving from compound to derivation -- 2.2. Moving from derivation to compound -- 3. Synthetic compounds -- 4. Unique morphs -- 5. Splinters -- 6. Neo-classical compounds -- 7. Prefixation -- 8. Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Compounding and derivation -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Borderline cases -- 2.1. Prefixation or compounding? -- 2.2. Affixoids -- 3. Access to morphological structure -- 4. Construction morphology -- 5. Conclusions -- References -- Selection in compounding and derivation -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Representation -- 3. Selection in derivation -- 3.1. -tore -- 3.2. -aio -- 4. Selection in compounding -- 4.1. Coordinate compounds -- 4.2. Subordinate compounds -- 4.3. Appositive/Attributive compounds -- 5. Concluding remarks -- Notes -- References -- Compounding and affixation -- 1. General -- 2. Proposal -- 2.1. Framework -- 2.2. The nature of compounding and affixation as word-formation processes -- 2.3. The status of affixal and non-affixal morphemes -- 2.4. Headedness and its influence upon the separation/identity issue -- 3. Conclusions -- Notes -- References -- On a semantically grounded difference between derivation and compounding -- 1. Object -- 2. Derived agent nouns in -eur -- 2.1. Description -- 2.2. Applying the rule -- 2.3. The problem -- 3. Compounding -- 3.1. Unexpected finding -- 3.2. Hypotheses on compounding -- 3.3. Diversity in compounding -- 4. Conclusion -- Appendix -- Notes -- References.

Between compounding and derivation -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The criteria -- 3. The data and the results -- 3.1. Real prefixes: sur-, sous-, en-, entre-, contre- -- 3.2. Formatives but not real prefixes: sans-, avant-, après- -- 4. Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Cumulative exponence involving derivation -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Cumulation within derivation -- 2.1. 'Agent noun' + 'Male/Female' -- 2.2. Cumulation involving evaluative semantics -- 3. Cumulation between inflection and derivation: Some doubtful cases -- 3.1. Movierung by inflectional class assignment -- 3.2. Fusion phenomena at the derivation-inflection boundary -- 3.3. Cumulation between borderline categories: Manner adverbs and grade of comparison -- 4. Some more convincing cases -- 4.1. Cumulation originating from fusion -- 4.2. When a word-forming process is reanalysed as inflectional agreement -- 4.3. Cumulation coming from affix suppletion -- 5. Conclusions -- Notes -- References -- Revising the phonological motivation for splitting morphology -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Data -- 3. A correspondence surface-oriented analysis within Optimality Theory -- 3.1. Background of paradigmatic effects in Optimality Theory -- 3.2. Wellegga Oromo: An asymmetric relation -- 3.3. Majorca Catalan: A symmetric relation -- 4. Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Derivation versus inflection in three inflecting languages -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Diminutivization -- 3. Gender MALES -> FEMALES -- 4. Aspect -- 5. Derivation versus inflection -- 6. Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- Notes -- References -- Antipassive sja-verbs in Russian -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Russian sja-verbs: Inflection vs. word formation -- 2.1. Sja-verbs: An overview -- 2.2. The properties of inflection and word formation -- 2.3. Passive vs. other productive types of valency-changing sja-uses -- 3. 'Lexical sja-antipassives'.

4. Grammatical sja-antipassives -- 5. Lexicalisation of antipassives -- 6. Discussion -- Notes -- References -- Slavic prefixes as State morphemes -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Event-structure value of prefixes & event structure of prefixed verbs -- 3. Inceptive prefix za- -- 4. Filip's (2003) ''manner prefixes'' -- 5. Filip's (2003) Source-prefixes -- 6. Attenuative vague-measure po- ('pofective' po-) -- 6.1. Precise meaning of po- -- 7. Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Delineating the boundary between inflection-class marking and derivational marking -- 1. Sanskrit causatives -- 2. The traditional view of -aya as a mark of inflection-class membership -- 3. The criterion of semantic contrast -- 4. More on the distribution of -aya stems -- 5. The criterion of uniformity -- 6. Summary of criteria -- 7. Analyzing -aya as -ay-a -- Notes -- References -- Language index -- Subject index -- The series CURRENT ISSUES IN LINGUISTIC THEORY.
Abstract:
The papers in this volume derive from the International Morphology Meeting (Vienna 2004) and were selected because they address the main topic of the conference: external and internal demarcations of morphology. The external demarcation between syntax and morphology is dealt with in the papers by Rood, Cysouw, Milićević, Blom, Enrique-Arias, and Heine & König. Demarcations of inflection and derivation are discussed in the contributions by Ricca, Lloret, Manova, Say, Žaucer, and Stump. In contrast to theoretical discussions in previous literature, which have concentrated on the internal boundary between inflection and derivation, this volume attributes equal importance to the demarcations between derivation and compounding, addressed in the contributions by Bauer, Booij, Štekauer, Fradin, Amiot, and Scalise, Bisetto & Guevara.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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