This paper provides an account of the regularities of plural exponence in Modern Hebrew. There are two genders in Modern Hebrew, each with its specific plural marker. Nouns can appear in the Construct or Free states, and the State of a noun also has an effect on the plural marking, though only in the case of masculine nouns. Finally, in nouns with possessive suffixes and in newly-formed dual nouns, plural number seems to be marked twice in the feminine noun, but only once in the masculine noun. The analysis first formalizes the distribution of the plural allomorphs of gender and State in the language using the Vocabulary Items of Distributed Morphology (Halle & Marantz 1993). It is then claimed that the morpho-syntactic structures of N+poss...
Beliefs about a language rarely correspond to how it is used. This is especially true for Hebrew, a ...
Access to grammatical gender in Hebrew was examined using gender decisions, lexical decision, two-wo...
ManuscriptWhy only segholate nouns have weird plurals. A working version of a short paper I wrote to...
ABSTRACT: All Hebrew nouns have a grammatical gender, masculine or feminine. Morphosyntactic agreeme...
© 2018 National Association of Professors of Hebrew. All Rights Reserved. This article is the first ...
This article continues a study begun in the preceding volume of Hebrew Studies. The 3 m. sg. pronomi...
Abstract According to the 'word/rule' account, regular inflection is computed by a default...
This study examined the acquisition of Hebrew noun plurals in early immersion and bilingual educatio...
This study addresses the correlation between valence changing operations and morpho-phonology in Mod...
Gender-number agreement in Spoken Israeli Hebrew. The rules of gender and number agreement in Spoken...
Basic morphology of Hebrew genders and numbers.https://scholar.csl.edu/hebrew/1013/thumbnail.jp
© 2016 The Author(s).The article represents structural semantic analysis of the grammatical number o...
This study examines nominal reduplicative constructions (the reiteration of complete nouns) in Moder...
In Hebrew, content words are usually composed of two interleaving morphemes; roots which carry seman...
Modern Hebrew exhibits a derivational process known as Denominai Verb Formation (DVF) whereby a base...
Beliefs about a language rarely correspond to how it is used. This is especially true for Hebrew, a ...
Access to grammatical gender in Hebrew was examined using gender decisions, lexical decision, two-wo...
ManuscriptWhy only segholate nouns have weird plurals. A working version of a short paper I wrote to...
ABSTRACT: All Hebrew nouns have a grammatical gender, masculine or feminine. Morphosyntactic agreeme...
© 2018 National Association of Professors of Hebrew. All Rights Reserved. This article is the first ...
This article continues a study begun in the preceding volume of Hebrew Studies. The 3 m. sg. pronomi...
Abstract According to the 'word/rule' account, regular inflection is computed by a default...
This study examined the acquisition of Hebrew noun plurals in early immersion and bilingual educatio...
This study addresses the correlation between valence changing operations and morpho-phonology in Mod...
Gender-number agreement in Spoken Israeli Hebrew. The rules of gender and number agreement in Spoken...
Basic morphology of Hebrew genders and numbers.https://scholar.csl.edu/hebrew/1013/thumbnail.jp
© 2016 The Author(s).The article represents structural semantic analysis of the grammatical number o...
This study examines nominal reduplicative constructions (the reiteration of complete nouns) in Moder...
In Hebrew, content words are usually composed of two interleaving morphemes; roots which carry seman...
Modern Hebrew exhibits a derivational process known as Denominai Verb Formation (DVF) whereby a base...
Beliefs about a language rarely correspond to how it is used. This is especially true for Hebrew, a ...
Access to grammatical gender in Hebrew was examined using gender decisions, lexical decision, two-wo...
ManuscriptWhy only segholate nouns have weird plurals. A working version of a short paper I wrote to...