This article presents an application of the theory of prototypes to the field of inflectional morphology and especially to the treatment of exceptions. From the assumption that the handling of irregular facts is basically ruled by the same principles of categorization as the handling of regular facts, the article shows on concrete examples of German nouns - weak masculine nouns, feminine nouns with inflected e-plural and er-plural - that the principle of the motivation of inflection by other properties of lexical items (phonological, semantic, syntactic properties) also works in inflectional classes with few elements. This type of analysis leads to the hypothesis of much more complex categorial structures, which includes subcategories with ...
In New High German the following five declension classes of the noun are distinguished: 1) the femin...
Nominalized infinitives (NIs, such as (das) Lachen ‘(the) laughing’, (das) Um-die-Ecke-Wohnen lit. ʻ...
Abstract The genitive singular of the weak masculine nouns appears in three non-standard variations ...
This article presents an application of the theory of prototypes to the field of inflectional morpho...
This paper deals with the interplay of feature and prototype theory. The construction of word field...
The article discusses the applicability of prototype theory and the theoiy of semantic fields for th...
It has often been criticized that Learners’ Dictionaries lack a theoretical basis in linguistic theo...
Traditional componential semantics are faced with various problems in adequately describing the mean...
The human mind may produce prototypization within virtually any realm of cognition and behavior. A "...
The article discusses the applicability of prototype theory and the theoiy of semantic fields for t...
The article examines the innovative processes in the morphological system of the German language ba...
"Warum Flexionsklassen?" lautet ein synchron ausgerichteter Aufsatz von BERND WIESE (2000), an den d...
Morphological analysis of inflectional categories has been for a long time a favored field of classi...
The theory of prototypes is a kind of referential semantics based on instanciation which aims at bre...
Based on data mostly taken from corpora of written German language use, this paper analyzes linguist...
In New High German the following five declension classes of the noun are distinguished: 1) the femin...
Nominalized infinitives (NIs, such as (das) Lachen ‘(the) laughing’, (das) Um-die-Ecke-Wohnen lit. ʻ...
Abstract The genitive singular of the weak masculine nouns appears in three non-standard variations ...
This article presents an application of the theory of prototypes to the field of inflectional morpho...
This paper deals with the interplay of feature and prototype theory. The construction of word field...
The article discusses the applicability of prototype theory and the theoiy of semantic fields for th...
It has often been criticized that Learners’ Dictionaries lack a theoretical basis in linguistic theo...
Traditional componential semantics are faced with various problems in adequately describing the mean...
The human mind may produce prototypization within virtually any realm of cognition and behavior. A "...
The article discusses the applicability of prototype theory and the theoiy of semantic fields for t...
The article examines the innovative processes in the morphological system of the German language ba...
"Warum Flexionsklassen?" lautet ein synchron ausgerichteter Aufsatz von BERND WIESE (2000), an den d...
Morphological analysis of inflectional categories has been for a long time a favored field of classi...
The theory of prototypes is a kind of referential semantics based on instanciation which aims at bre...
Based on data mostly taken from corpora of written German language use, this paper analyzes linguist...
In New High German the following five declension classes of the noun are distinguished: 1) the femin...
Nominalized infinitives (NIs, such as (das) Lachen ‘(the) laughing’, (das) Um-die-Ecke-Wohnen lit. ʻ...
Abstract The genitive singular of the weak masculine nouns appears in three non-standard variations ...