For virtually as long as linguists have studied contact‐induced grammatical change, the borrowing of morphological formatives and patterns has been considered a relatively infrequent phenomenon—a view which is reflected in all well‐known borrowability scales. Yet all those scales have been constructed from limited data sets, thus producing rather intuitive generalizations, for example, that inflection is more resistant to borrowing than derivation. In reality, we do not have a precise idea of the global extent of the phenomenon. In particular, the borrowing of compounding techniques is a virtually uninvestigated topic. In recent years, linguists have more intensively pursued a line of research that identifies in the study of contact‐induced...
Schulte M. The semantic development of borrowed derivational morphology Change and stability in Fren...
The replication of concrete formal-structural material (morpho-phonological forms with attached mean...
Morphological change is not a result of mechanical, predictable processes, but of the behavior of la...
For virtually as long as linguists have studied contact‐induced grammatical change, the borrowing of...
Morphological inventories and structures of languages in contact can converge by means of either inc...
This chapter focuses on a wide range of phenomena occurring under the heading of contact-induced mor...
This collection of articles takes up the issue of Contact Morphology raised by David Wilkins in 1996...
languages spoken outside of India, shows that borrowing has an impact on a wide range of grammatical...
It is well known that words are usually borrowed without the morphology used by the lending language...
This paper discusses the use of derivational morphology to accommodate loanwords, a process I term t...
Online annotated bibliography in the Oxford Bibliographies collection (Oxford University Press).The ...
This thesis investigates the system governing complex morphological forms in English and the way in ...
International audienceThis exploratory overview of structural borrowing in word-formation discusses ...
This paper examines the effects of contact-induced language change on the nominal and verbal inflect...
This study addresses the question whether the borrowability of linguistic forms, in particular affix...
Schulte M. The semantic development of borrowed derivational morphology Change and stability in Fren...
The replication of concrete formal-structural material (morpho-phonological forms with attached mean...
Morphological change is not a result of mechanical, predictable processes, but of the behavior of la...
For virtually as long as linguists have studied contact‐induced grammatical change, the borrowing of...
Morphological inventories and structures of languages in contact can converge by means of either inc...
This chapter focuses on a wide range of phenomena occurring under the heading of contact-induced mor...
This collection of articles takes up the issue of Contact Morphology raised by David Wilkins in 1996...
languages spoken outside of India, shows that borrowing has an impact on a wide range of grammatical...
It is well known that words are usually borrowed without the morphology used by the lending language...
This paper discusses the use of derivational morphology to accommodate loanwords, a process I term t...
Online annotated bibliography in the Oxford Bibliographies collection (Oxford University Press).The ...
This thesis investigates the system governing complex morphological forms in English and the way in ...
International audienceThis exploratory overview of structural borrowing in word-formation discusses ...
This paper examines the effects of contact-induced language change on the nominal and verbal inflect...
This study addresses the question whether the borrowability of linguistic forms, in particular affix...
Schulte M. The semantic development of borrowed derivational morphology Change and stability in Fren...
The replication of concrete formal-structural material (morpho-phonological forms with attached mean...
Morphological change is not a result of mechanical, predictable processes, but of the behavior of la...