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This book presents a comprehensive, data-rich, theory-neutral
description of English word formation, including inflection and
derivation, compounding, conversion, and such minor processes as
subtractive morphology. It also offers analyses of the theoretical
challenges these phenomena present. It is the first to make
systematic use of large linguistic corpora, including the Corpus of
Contemporary American English, the British National Corpus, and the
American National Corpus by which, for example, the authors are
able to measure the productivity of different patterns and to trace
semantic developments as they happen. After setting out their
methodology and theoretical assumptions, the authors describe word
formation and inflection in contemporary English. They give equal
weight to form and meaning and cover nominalizations, agentive
forms, comparatives, root and synthetic compounds, as well as more
recondite topics such as the abstract noun-forming suffixes -hood,
-dom, and -ship, neoclassical compounds, and the morphology of
numbers. They examine the relations between orthography and
phonological form. While their focus is on contemporary morphology,
they trace the history of phenomena wherever doing so helps to
understand and explain current form and function. The final part of
the book shows how the data assembled within it bear on current
theoretical issues and reveal new lines of research. This
outstanding book will interest all scholars and students of English
and of linguistic morphology more generally.
This volume brings together cutting-edge research on the semantic
properties of derived words and the processes by which these words
are derived. To this day, many of these processes remain
under-researched and the nature of meaning in derivational
morphology remains ill-understood. All eight articles have an
empirical focus and rely on carefully collected sets of data. At
the same time, the contributions represent a broad variety of
approaches. Several contributions deal with specific problems of
the pairing of form and meaning, such as the rivalry between
nominalizing suffixes or the semantic categories encoded by
conversion pairs. Other articles tackle the more general question
of how meaning is organized, e.g. whether there is evidence for the
paradigmatic organization of derived words or the reality of the
inflection-derivation dichotomy. The contributions feature
innovative methodologies, such as representing lexical meaning as
word distribution or predicting semantic properties by means of
analogical algorithms. This volume offers new and highly
interesting insights into how complex words mean, and offers
directions for future research in an oft-neglected field.
This volume brings together articles that are focused on segmental,
syllabic and morphological aspects of creole words, thus
contributing to the ongoing debates about the nature of phonology
and morphology and their role in emergence and development of these
languages. The papers cover a wide range of creole languages with
different lexifier languages and address empirical, typological,
historical and theoretical issues, drawing our attention to
hitherto unknown phenomena or offering interesting new analyses of
established facts. With contributions from: Parth Bhatt, Alain
Kihm, Thomas Klein, Emmanuel Nikiema, Ingo Plag, Marina
Pucciarelli, Jean-Louis Rouge, Eric Russel-Webb, Shobha Satyanath,
Emmanuel Schang, Mareile Schramm, Norval Smith, Marleen van de Vate
and Tonjes Veenstra.
Until very recently, phonology and morphology have been neglected
areas in the study of creole languages. This collection of articles
presents intriguing data and new analyses from a wide range of
creoles that call into question traditional claims about the nature
of the phonological and morphological systems of these languages
and give crucial insights into one of the major questions of creole
studies, i.e. the question of how these languages and their
grammars come about. The volume is organized into 5 sections, each
focusing on particular aspects of the respective subsystems:
>Segments and syllables<, >Stress, tone and
intonation<, >Morphophonology<, >Derivational
morphology<, >Inflection<.
The new and updated third edition of this highly successful
textbook contains an additional chapter that presents modern
empirical research methods in the form of exemplary small-scale
studies. In these projects the authors invite the reader to develop
and address research questions from phonetics/phonology, morphology
and syntax. The pertinent experimental and corpus-linguistic
techniques are introduced and students are familiarized with some
basic statistical tools necessary for the analysis of the data. The
major difference between this book and its potential competitors
lies in its hands-on didactic orientation, with a strong focus on
linguistic analysis and argumentation. Language and linguistic
theory are approached from a strictly empirical perspective: given
a certain set of data to be accounted for, theoretical and
methodological problems must be solved in order to analyze and
understand the data properly. The book is not written from the
perspective of a particular theoretical framework and draws on
insights from various research traditions. Introduction to English
Linguistics concentrates on gaining expertise and analytical skills
in the traditional core areas of linguistics, i.e. phonology,
morphology, syntax, semantics and pragmatics. The chapter on
"Extensions and applications" widens the perspective to other areas
of linguistic research, such as historical, socio- and
psycholinguistics. Each chapter is accompanied by exercises and
suggestions for further reading. A glossary and an index facilitate
access to terms and topics.
Over the past few decades, the book series Linguistische Arbeiten
[Linguistic Studies], comprising over 500 volumes, has made a
significant contribution to the development of linguistic theory
both in Germany and internationally. The series will continue to
deliver new impulses for research and maintain the central insight
of linguistics that progress can only be made in acquiring new
knowledge about human languages both synchronically and
diachronically by closely combining empirical and theoretical
analyses. To this end, we invite submission of high-quality
linguistic studies from all the central areas of general
linguistics and the linguistics of individual languages which
address topical questions, discuss new data and advance the
development of linguistic theory.
This book is the second edition of a highly successful introduction
to the study of word-formation, that is, the ways in which new
words are built on the bases of other words (e.g. happy -
happy-ness), focusing on English. The book's didactic aim is to
enable students with little or no prior linguistic knowledge to do
their own practical analyses of complex words. Readers are
familiarized with the necessary methodological tools to obtain and
analyze relevant data and are shown how to relate their findings to
theoretical problems and debates. The second edition incorporates
new developments in morphology at both the methodological and the
theoretical level. It introduces the use of new corpora and data
bases, acquaints the reader with state-of-the-art computational
algorithms modeling morphology, and brings in current debates and
theories.
Word storage and processing define a multi-factorial domain of
scientific inquiry whose thorough investigation goes well beyond
the boundaries of traditional disciplinary taxonomies, to require
synergic integration of a wide range of methods, techniques and
empirical and experimental findings. The present book intends to
approach a few central issues concerning the organization,
structure and functioning of the Mental Lexicon, by asking domain
experts to look at common, central topics from complementary
standpoints, and discuss the advantages of developing converging
perspectives. The book will explore the connections between
computational and algorithmic models of the mental lexicon, word
frequency distributions and information theoretical measures of
word families, statistical correlations across psycho-linguistic
and cognitive evidence, principles of machine learning and
integrative brain models of word storage and processing. Main goal
of the book will be to map out the landscape of future research in
this area, to foster the development of interdisciplinary curricula
and help single-domain specialists understand and address issues
and questions as they are raised in other disciplines.
This book deals with one of the central problems for theories of
word-formation, the productivity of morphological processes. The
productivity of these processes is assessed, using both text-based
and dictionary - based measures (Cobuild corpus vs. Oxford English
Dictionary). Implementing Optimality Theory and Jackendorff's
Lexical Conceptual Semantics, a large number of 20th century
neologisms extracted from the OED are investigated with regard to
their phonological, morphological and semantic characteristics. On
the theoretical level the proposed analysis presents evidence
against the separation of meaning and form in derivational
morphology and for a sign-based, output-oriented model instead.
This volume presents a data-rich description of English inflection
and word-formation. Based on large corpora including the Corpus of
Contemporary American English and the British national Corpus, it
is the first comprehensive treatment of contemporary English
morphology that includes both inflection and word-formation. It
covers not only well-studied topics such as compounding,
conversion, and the inflection and derivation of nouns and verbs,
but also areas that have received less scholarly attention, such as
the formation of adjectives, locatives, negatives, evaluatives,
neoclassical compounds and blends, among many other topics. Equal
wieght is given to form and meaning. The volume also contains
sections devoted to phonological and orthographics aspects of
morphology and to combinatorial and paradigmatic properties of
English morphology. It ends with a series of chapters that assess
the implications of English morphology for morphological theory,
discussing topics such as stratification, blocking and comprtition,
the analysis of conversion, and the relationship between inflection
and derivation. Winner of the 2015 Bloomfield Book Award and
written by three outstanding scholars, this outstanding book will
interest all scholars and students of English and of linguistic
morphology more generally.
Word storage and processing define a multi-factorial domain of
scientific inquiry whose thorough investigation goes well beyond
the boundaries of traditional disciplinary taxonomies, to require
synergic integration of a wide range of methods, techniques and
empirical and experimental findings. The present book intends to
approach a few central issues concerning the organization,
structure and functioning of the Mental Lexicon, by asking domain
experts to look at common, central topics from complementary
standpoints, and discuss the advantages of developing converging
perspectives. The book will explore the connections between
computational and algorithmic models of the mental lexicon, word
frequency distributions and information theoretical measures of
word families, statistical correlations across psycho-linguistic
and cognitive evidence, principles of machine learning and
integrative brain models of word storage and processing. Main goal
of the book will be to map out the landscape of future research in
this area, to foster the development of interdisciplinary curricula
and help single-domain specialists understand and address issues
and questions as they are raised in other disciplines.
This book is the second edition of a highly successful introduction
to the study of word-formation, that is, the ways in which new
words are built on the bases of other words (e.g. happy -
happy-ness), focusing on English. The book's didactic aim is to
enable students with little or no prior linguistic knowledge to do
their own practical analyses of complex words. Readers are
familiarized with the necessary methodological tools to obtain and
analyze relevant data and are shown how to relate their findings to
theoretical problems and debates. The second edition incorporates
new developments in morphology at both the methodological and the
theoretical level. It introduces the use of new corpora and data
bases, acquaints the reader with state-of-the-art computational
algorithms modeling morphology, and brings in current debates and
theories.
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