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20. “Constructional” and “structural” iconicity of noun vs. adjective/pronoun markers in the Slavic nominal inflection
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Thomas Menzel
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Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Introduction 1
- 1. The lexical bases of morphological well-formedness 5
- 2. On category asymmetries in derivational morphology 17
- 3. What you can do with derivational morphology 37
- 4. How stems and affixes interact 49
- 5. Adjectival past-participle formation as an unaccusativity diagnostic in English and in Polish 59
- 6. Morphophonological alternations 73
- 7. Morphology, typology, computation 91
- 8. On contrastive word-formation semantics 105
- 9. The acquisition of German plurals 117
- 10. Language-specific effects on the development of written morphology 129
- 11. Graded semantic and phonological similarity effects in morphologically complex words 137
- 12. Passive in Arabic and English 149
- 13. Lexical access in Bulgarian perfective vs. imperfective verbs 161
- 14. Inflectional morphemes as syntactic heads 175
- 15. The problem of morphological description of verbal forms ambivalent between finite and nonfinite uses 185
- 16. “Anomalies” of cross-reference marking 199
- 17. Is there a morphological parser? 213
- 18. External and internal causation in morphological change 227
- 19. Towards a formal concept ‘zero linguistic sign’ 241
- 20. “Constructional” and “structural” iconicity of noun vs. adjective/pronoun markers in the Slavic nominal inflection 259
- 21. Morphological splits – Iconicity and Optimality 271
- 22. Gender inversion in Romance derivatives with -arius 283
- 23. Polysynthetic word formation 293
- 24. On the mental representation of Russian aspect relations 305
- Language index 313
- Subject index 315
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Introduction 1
- 1. The lexical bases of morphological well-formedness 5
- 2. On category asymmetries in derivational morphology 17
- 3. What you can do with derivational morphology 37
- 4. How stems and affixes interact 49
- 5. Adjectival past-participle formation as an unaccusativity diagnostic in English and in Polish 59
- 6. Morphophonological alternations 73
- 7. Morphology, typology, computation 91
- 8. On contrastive word-formation semantics 105
- 9. The acquisition of German plurals 117
- 10. Language-specific effects on the development of written morphology 129
- 11. Graded semantic and phonological similarity effects in morphologically complex words 137
- 12. Passive in Arabic and English 149
- 13. Lexical access in Bulgarian perfective vs. imperfective verbs 161
- 14. Inflectional morphemes as syntactic heads 175
- 15. The problem of morphological description of verbal forms ambivalent between finite and nonfinite uses 185
- 16. “Anomalies” of cross-reference marking 199
- 17. Is there a morphological parser? 213
- 18. External and internal causation in morphological change 227
- 19. Towards a formal concept ‘zero linguistic sign’ 241
- 20. “Constructional” and “structural” iconicity of noun vs. adjective/pronoun markers in the Slavic nominal inflection 259
- 21. Morphological splits – Iconicity and Optimality 271
- 22. Gender inversion in Romance derivatives with -arius 283
- 23. Polysynthetic word formation 293
- 24. On the mental representation of Russian aspect relations 305
- Language index 313
- Subject index 315