Morphological change is not a result of mechanical, predictable processes, but of the behavior of language users. Speakers reinterpret opaque data in order to assign a more transparent structure to them. Subsequently successful reinterpretation may form the basis of new derivations. The moment such a derivative word formation process becomes productive a language change has taken place. In addition, this paper shows how language change obscures the distinction between separate morphological processes such as compounding and derivation and thus between morphological categories. Moreover, the data under discussion show that there is not a preferred natural direction of language change. Most of the examples are taken from English and Dutch, bu...
The diachronic change of word-formation patterns is currently gaining increasing interest in cogniti...
This collection of articles takes up the issue of Contact Morphology raised by David Wilkins in 1996...
For virtually as long as linguists have studied contact‐induced grammatical change, the borrowing of...
The aim of this study is to show how languages may change. To this end, three processes of non-morph...
This paper discusses two different directions in morphological change: from full form to suffix and ...
This paper discusses two different directions in morphological change: from full form to suffix and ...
Marchand (1969) examines possible cases of lexical category change and distinguishes between two dif...
Traditionally, contemporary German is considered to be rich in affixes which is displayed by a wide ...
This chapter focuses on a wide range of phenomena occurring under the heading of contact-induced mor...
This library research aims to (1) identify effects of various colonialism on the change of morpholog...
Morphology or morphemic is defined as the study of the morpheme and their arrangements in building n...
In this presentation we compare different syntactic and morphological processes of category change, ...
This paper discusses morphological borrowing from American-English to Dutch. Three processes of non-...
Morphological processes are operations by the forms of words which are derived from technical concep...
This paper argues for a strong distinction between morphological and syntactic processes, as the man...
The diachronic change of word-formation patterns is currently gaining increasing interest in cogniti...
This collection of articles takes up the issue of Contact Morphology raised by David Wilkins in 1996...
For virtually as long as linguists have studied contact‐induced grammatical change, the borrowing of...
The aim of this study is to show how languages may change. To this end, three processes of non-morph...
This paper discusses two different directions in morphological change: from full form to suffix and ...
This paper discusses two different directions in morphological change: from full form to suffix and ...
Marchand (1969) examines possible cases of lexical category change and distinguishes between two dif...
Traditionally, contemporary German is considered to be rich in affixes which is displayed by a wide ...
This chapter focuses on a wide range of phenomena occurring under the heading of contact-induced mor...
This library research aims to (1) identify effects of various colonialism on the change of morpholog...
Morphology or morphemic is defined as the study of the morpheme and their arrangements in building n...
In this presentation we compare different syntactic and morphological processes of category change, ...
This paper discusses morphological borrowing from American-English to Dutch. Three processes of non-...
Morphological processes are operations by the forms of words which are derived from technical concep...
This paper argues for a strong distinction between morphological and syntactic processes, as the man...
The diachronic change of word-formation patterns is currently gaining increasing interest in cogniti...
This collection of articles takes up the issue of Contact Morphology raised by David Wilkins in 1996...
For virtually as long as linguists have studied contact‐induced grammatical change, the borrowing of...