This chapter argues that there is no absolute boundary between analogy and abstract schemas in word formation. Patterns of compounding are captured by constructional schemas of various degrees of abstraction. The necessity of such subschemas is argued for on the basis of observations on semantic specialization, headedness variation, diachrony, and allomorphy selection. Analogy and abstract schemas are opposite endpoints on a scale of schematicity
The main purpose of this paper is, on the one hand, to show the relevance of the notion of analogy t...
The study of the argument structure of Persian synthetic compounds shows that not only do the intern...
The lexicon of Modern Chinese is characterised by a preponderance of multi-morphemic words, which ar...
The chapter provides an outline of Construction Morphology (Booij 2010), a recent model of morpholog...
The paper explores analogy and schemes in new complex words primarily used as clever attention seeki...
Morphology is the study of the systematic relationship between the form and meaning of complex words...
Construction Grammar sees the language system as consisting solely of conventionalized pairings of f...
The 'traditional' distinction of compounds into endocentric (Eng. doorknob) and exocentric (pickpock...
This paper sketches the current status of morphology and paradigms in linguistic theorising. In part...
The comparative form of morphologically complex ADJs raises new issues for a theory of word-formati...
This squib considers some of the issues surrounding the growth and contractions of contentful schema...
While most approaches to unsupervised morphology acquisition often rely on metrics based on informat...
This paper aims at exploring the morphological process of word formation in terms of the analysis of...
Competition in morphology is generally viewed as a relation holding between words or word formation ...
Although compounding is the part of morphology which is closest to syntax, studies in Natural Morph...
The main purpose of this paper is, on the one hand, to show the relevance of the notion of analogy t...
The study of the argument structure of Persian synthetic compounds shows that not only do the intern...
The lexicon of Modern Chinese is characterised by a preponderance of multi-morphemic words, which ar...
The chapter provides an outline of Construction Morphology (Booij 2010), a recent model of morpholog...
The paper explores analogy and schemes in new complex words primarily used as clever attention seeki...
Morphology is the study of the systematic relationship between the form and meaning of complex words...
Construction Grammar sees the language system as consisting solely of conventionalized pairings of f...
The 'traditional' distinction of compounds into endocentric (Eng. doorknob) and exocentric (pickpock...
This paper sketches the current status of morphology and paradigms in linguistic theorising. In part...
The comparative form of morphologically complex ADJs raises new issues for a theory of word-formati...
This squib considers some of the issues surrounding the growth and contractions of contentful schema...
While most approaches to unsupervised morphology acquisition often rely on metrics based on informat...
This paper aims at exploring the morphological process of word formation in terms of the analysis of...
Competition in morphology is generally viewed as a relation holding between words or word formation ...
Although compounding is the part of morphology which is closest to syntax, studies in Natural Morph...
The main purpose of this paper is, on the one hand, to show the relevance of the notion of analogy t...
The study of the argument structure of Persian synthetic compounds shows that not only do the intern...
The lexicon of Modern Chinese is characterised by a preponderance of multi-morphemic words, which ar...