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Suppletion from a typological perspective
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Ljuba N. Veselinova
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Chapters in this book
- i-viii i
- Contents ix
- Introduction 1
-
Part I. Phonology and the interface between phonology, morphology, and syntax
- Strong linearity and the typology of templates 11
- The Phonology-Morphology Interface from the perspective of infixation 35
- Typological evidence for the separation between stress and foot structure 55
- Tone in Bodish languages: Typological and sociolinguistic contributions 77
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Part II. Morphology, the lexicon, and the structure of words
- Rembarrnga polysynthesis in cross-linguistic perspective 103
- Suppletion from a typological perspective 127
- Lexical classes: A functional approach to “word formation” 153
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Part III. Nominal and verbal morphosyntax in interaction: Transitivity and alignment
- Defining transitivity: Markedness vs. prototypicality 179
- From the typology of inversion to the typology of alignment 199
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Part IV. Pronominals
- Building semantic maps: The case of person marking 225
- Typology and historical linguistics: Some remarks on reflexives in ancient IE languages 249
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Part V. Verbal and clausal categories
- Discreteness and non-discreteness in the design of tense-aspect-mood 271
- Symmetric and asymmetric encoding of functional domains, with remarks on typological markedness 293
- The verbness markers of Mosetén from a typological perspective 315
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Part VI. Complex sentences
- Converging patterns of clause linkage in Nagaland 339
- The many faces of subordination, in Germanic and beyond 363
- 385-407 385
Chapters in this book
- i-viii i
- Contents ix
- Introduction 1
-
Part I. Phonology and the interface between phonology, morphology, and syntax
- Strong linearity and the typology of templates 11
- The Phonology-Morphology Interface from the perspective of infixation 35
- Typological evidence for the separation between stress and foot structure 55
- Tone in Bodish languages: Typological and sociolinguistic contributions 77
-
Part II. Morphology, the lexicon, and the structure of words
- Rembarrnga polysynthesis in cross-linguistic perspective 103
- Suppletion from a typological perspective 127
- Lexical classes: A functional approach to “word formation” 153
-
Part III. Nominal and verbal morphosyntax in interaction: Transitivity and alignment
- Defining transitivity: Markedness vs. prototypicality 179
- From the typology of inversion to the typology of alignment 199
-
Part IV. Pronominals
- Building semantic maps: The case of person marking 225
- Typology and historical linguistics: Some remarks on reflexives in ancient IE languages 249
-
Part V. Verbal and clausal categories
- Discreteness and non-discreteness in the design of tense-aspect-mood 271
- Symmetric and asymmetric encoding of functional domains, with remarks on typological markedness 293
- The verbness markers of Mosetén from a typological perspective 315
-
Part VI. Complex sentences
- Converging patterns of clause linkage in Nagaland 339
- The many faces of subordination, in Germanic and beyond 363
- 385-407 385