This article provides a counterexample to the commonly held, if unexamined, proposition that morphemes reconstructed as affixes do not change their position with respect to the root. We do not expect to find that a proto-prefix has suffix reflexes, nor that a proto-suffix has prefix reflexes. In this paper we show, through detailed reconstruction, that paradigms of class/case suffixes in a number of Northern Australian languages derive historically from a paradigm of proto-prefixes, through the encliticization and reduction of prefixed demonstratives to nominals. This process has only left a few traces of the demonstrative stems in the synchronic forms.28
There is an old observation that, from a global perspective, there are more suffixes than prefixes i...
Morphophonological asymmetries in affixation concern systematic correlations between morphological p...
Published as a special volume of the Coyote Papers: The University of Arizona Working Papers in Ling...
© Copyright 2006 John Benjamins.This article provides a counterexample to the commonly held, if unex...
This article provides a counterexample to the commonly held, if unexamined, proposition that morphem...
One of the most common ways of morphological marking is affixation, morphemes are classified accordi...
One of the most common ways of morphological marking is affixation, morphemes are classified accordi...
There are many suffixes on kinship terms in Pama-Nyungan languages in Australia, some readily segmen...
Verbal suffixes have been the subject of a protracted debate. Suffixes are diachronically defined as...
Cross-linguistic studies of morphology have demonstrated that there is an asymmetry in the type of a...
peer reviewedThis chapter provides a survey of demonstratives in Australian languages. It discusses ...
Suffixaufnahme and multiple case marking in Australian languages have been discussed in several pape...
Contains fulltext : 6028.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Cross-linguistic ...
Inflectional classes are classes of lexemes which share a content paradigm (they inflect for the sam...
This paper discusses the analysis of a particular class of morphemes in the Oceanic language Äiwoo, ...
There is an old observation that, from a global perspective, there are more suffixes than prefixes i...
Morphophonological asymmetries in affixation concern systematic correlations between morphological p...
Published as a special volume of the Coyote Papers: The University of Arizona Working Papers in Ling...
© Copyright 2006 John Benjamins.This article provides a counterexample to the commonly held, if unex...
This article provides a counterexample to the commonly held, if unexamined, proposition that morphem...
One of the most common ways of morphological marking is affixation, morphemes are classified accordi...
One of the most common ways of morphological marking is affixation, morphemes are classified accordi...
There are many suffixes on kinship terms in Pama-Nyungan languages in Australia, some readily segmen...
Verbal suffixes have been the subject of a protracted debate. Suffixes are diachronically defined as...
Cross-linguistic studies of morphology have demonstrated that there is an asymmetry in the type of a...
peer reviewedThis chapter provides a survey of demonstratives in Australian languages. It discusses ...
Suffixaufnahme and multiple case marking in Australian languages have been discussed in several pape...
Contains fulltext : 6028.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Cross-linguistic ...
Inflectional classes are classes of lexemes which share a content paradigm (they inflect for the sam...
This paper discusses the analysis of a particular class of morphemes in the Oceanic language Äiwoo, ...
There is an old observation that, from a global perspective, there are more suffixes than prefixes i...
Morphophonological asymmetries in affixation concern systematic correlations between morphological p...
Published as a special volume of the Coyote Papers: The University of Arizona Working Papers in Ling...