German linking elements are sometimes classified as inflectional affixes, sometimes as derivational affixes, and in any case as morphological units with at least seven realisations (e.g. -s-, -es-, -(e)n-, -e-). This article seeks to show that linking elements are hybrid elements situated between morphology and phonology. On the one hand, they have a clear morphological status since they occur only within compounds (and before a very small set of suffixes) and support the listener in decoding them. On the other hand, they also have to be analysed on the phonological level, as will be shown in this article. Thus, they are marginal morphological units on the pathway to phonology (including prosodics). Although some alloforms can sometimes be ...
Ιn both German and English many fewer combinations of derivational suffixes exist than should be pos...
The article examines the innovative processes in the morphological system of the German language ba...
Many researchers assume that the relation between morphology and phonology is not a direct one but i...
This thesis is primarily concerned with the status and derivation of linking elements in German (an...
Contemporary German abounds in doubtful cases where linking elements alternate with zero elements, s...
Linking elements such as -s in German Versicherung-s-vertreter are found in between the parts of wor...
This article addresses the linking element -s- concerning its distribution and functionality in dial...
The present paper explores the change in distribution and potential function as well as the interpla...
This dataset accompanies a paper to be published in "Morphology" (JOMO, Springer). Under the present...
This article compares linking elements occurring in nominal compounds in German, Dutch, Swedish and...
Present-day German uses two formally different patterns of compounding in N+N compounds. The first c...
Summary: In this paper we report on an exploration of noun-noun compounds in a large German corpus. ...
The morphosyntactic decomposition of German compound words and a proposed function of linking elemen...
& The morphosyntactic decomposition of German compound words and a proposed function of linking ...
This paper examines whether the selection of linking elements for novel German compounds can be bett...
Ιn both German and English many fewer combinations of derivational suffixes exist than should be pos...
The article examines the innovative processes in the morphological system of the German language ba...
Many researchers assume that the relation between morphology and phonology is not a direct one but i...
This thesis is primarily concerned with the status and derivation of linking elements in German (an...
Contemporary German abounds in doubtful cases where linking elements alternate with zero elements, s...
Linking elements such as -s in German Versicherung-s-vertreter are found in between the parts of wor...
This article addresses the linking element -s- concerning its distribution and functionality in dial...
The present paper explores the change in distribution and potential function as well as the interpla...
This dataset accompanies a paper to be published in "Morphology" (JOMO, Springer). Under the present...
This article compares linking elements occurring in nominal compounds in German, Dutch, Swedish and...
Present-day German uses two formally different patterns of compounding in N+N compounds. The first c...
Summary: In this paper we report on an exploration of noun-noun compounds in a large German corpus. ...
The morphosyntactic decomposition of German compound words and a proposed function of linking elemen...
& The morphosyntactic decomposition of German compound words and a proposed function of linking ...
This paper examines whether the selection of linking elements for novel German compounds can be bett...
Ιn both German and English many fewer combinations of derivational suffixes exist than should be pos...
The article examines the innovative processes in the morphological system of the German language ba...
Many researchers assume that the relation between morphology and phonology is not a direct one but i...