Chapter 3. A formal restriction on gender resolution
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Sedigheh Moradi
Abstract
Resolved gender agreement occurs with coordination structures where combinations of two distinct genders are resolved into a different gender value. I have studied a representative sample of languages to understand why only a few of the logically conceivable patterns of agreement are attested. Starting from an underlying hierarchy of gender, I have constructed a pointwise algebra to represent various gender combinations. The gender hierarchy is directly extracted from the organization of the typological data. Combining abstract algebra and the mathematical notion of monotonicity helps us understand the restricted set of attested patterns to only allow monotonic mappings from the base hierarchy to output forms.
Abstract
Resolved gender agreement occurs with coordination structures where combinations of two distinct genders are resolved into a different gender value. I have studied a representative sample of languages to understand why only a few of the logically conceivable patterns of agreement are attested. Starting from an underlying hierarchy of gender, I have constructed a pointwise algebra to represent various gender combinations. The gender hierarchy is directly extracted from the organization of the typological data. Combining abstract algebra and the mathematical notion of monotonicity helps us understand the restricted set of attested patterns to only allow monotonic mappings from the base hierarchy to output forms.
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Chapter 1. All things morphology 1
-
Part I. Paradigms
- Chapter 2. Making sense of morphology 17
- Chapter 3. A formal restriction on gender resolution 41
-
Part II. Words, stems, and affixes
- Chapter 4. Signs and words 57
- Chapter 5. Leaving the stem by itself 81
- Chapter 6. Stem constancy under the microscope 99
- Chapter 7. Major lexical categories and graphemic weight 117
- Chapter 8. Word formation in the brain 127
- Chapter 9. The suffixing preference 147
-
Part III. Competition, inheritance, and defaults
- Chapter 10. Feature-based competition 171
- Chapter 11. Competition in comparatives 199
- Chapter 12. Multi-layered default in Ripano 215
-
Part IV. Morphomes
- Chapter 13. Morphomes all the way down! 239
- Chapter 14. Conditional exponence 255
- Chapter 15. My favorite morphome 279
- Chapter 16. In further pursuit of the adjective 289
- Chapter 17. Two-suffix combinations in native and non-native English 305
-
Part V. Interfaces
- Chapter 18. A short history of phonology in America 327
- Chapter 19. Realization Optimality Theory 349
- Chapter 20. A-prefixing in the ex-slave narratives 377
- Chapter 21. Trajectory of children’s verb formation in Hebrew as a heritage language 395
- Chapter 22. A primer for linguists on the reading wars 415
- Index of languages 431
- Index of names 433
- Index of terms 435
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Chapter 1. All things morphology 1
-
Part I. Paradigms
- Chapter 2. Making sense of morphology 17
- Chapter 3. A formal restriction on gender resolution 41
-
Part II. Words, stems, and affixes
- Chapter 4. Signs and words 57
- Chapter 5. Leaving the stem by itself 81
- Chapter 6. Stem constancy under the microscope 99
- Chapter 7. Major lexical categories and graphemic weight 117
- Chapter 8. Word formation in the brain 127
- Chapter 9. The suffixing preference 147
-
Part III. Competition, inheritance, and defaults
- Chapter 10. Feature-based competition 171
- Chapter 11. Competition in comparatives 199
- Chapter 12. Multi-layered default in Ripano 215
-
Part IV. Morphomes
- Chapter 13. Morphomes all the way down! 239
- Chapter 14. Conditional exponence 255
- Chapter 15. My favorite morphome 279
- Chapter 16. In further pursuit of the adjective 289
- Chapter 17. Two-suffix combinations in native and non-native English 305
-
Part V. Interfaces
- Chapter 18. A short history of phonology in America 327
- Chapter 19. Realization Optimality Theory 349
- Chapter 20. A-prefixing in the ex-slave narratives 377
- Chapter 21. Trajectory of children’s verb formation in Hebrew as a heritage language 395
- Chapter 22. A primer for linguists on the reading wars 415
- Index of languages 431
- Index of names 433
- Index of terms 435