Present-day German uses two formally different patterns of compounding in N+N compounds. The first combines bare stems (e.g. Tisch+decke ‘tablecloth’) while the second contains an intervening linking element (LE) as in Geburt-s-ort ‘birth-LE-place’. The linked compounding type developed in Early New High German (1350–1650) from phrasal constructions by reanalyzing genitive attributes as first constituents of compounds. The present paper uses corpus data to explore three key stages in this development: In the initial stage, it shows how prenominal non-specific genitive constructions lent themselves to reanalysis due to their functional overlap and formal similarity. Additionally, compounds seem to have replaced not only prenominal genitives,...
This dataset accompanies a paper to be published in "Morphology" (JOMO, Springer). Under the present...
German linking elements are sometimes classified as inflectional affixes, sometimes as derivational ...
The article delineates the development of nominal synthetic compounding in the history of German. In...
The present paper explores the change in distribution and potential function as well as the interpla...
This paper studies the morphological productivity of German N+N compounding patterns from a diachron...
This paper studies the morphological productivity of German N+N compounding patterns from a diachron...
Contemporary German abounds in doubtful cases where linking elements alternate with zero elements, s...
Summary: In this paper we report on an exploration of noun-noun compounds in a large German corpus. ...
This article addresses the linking element -s- concerning its distribution and functionality in dial...
This paper investigates the spelling of compound nouns in a corpus comprised of Early New High Germa...
In this paper, we concentrate on compounds formed with two nouns (NN compounds, or, in the English m...
This thesis is primarily concerned with the status and derivation of linking elements in German (an...
This thesis investigates the changes in whether compound nouns were closed (written as one word), op...
Early New High German N+N compounds are notoriously difficult to identify. This is mostly due to for...
This thesis investigates the changes in whether compound nouns were closed (written as one word), op...
This dataset accompanies a paper to be published in "Morphology" (JOMO, Springer). Under the present...
German linking elements are sometimes classified as inflectional affixes, sometimes as derivational ...
The article delineates the development of nominal synthetic compounding in the history of German. In...
The present paper explores the change in distribution and potential function as well as the interpla...
This paper studies the morphological productivity of German N+N compounding patterns from a diachron...
This paper studies the morphological productivity of German N+N compounding patterns from a diachron...
Contemporary German abounds in doubtful cases where linking elements alternate with zero elements, s...
Summary: In this paper we report on an exploration of noun-noun compounds in a large German corpus. ...
This article addresses the linking element -s- concerning its distribution and functionality in dial...
This paper investigates the spelling of compound nouns in a corpus comprised of Early New High Germa...
In this paper, we concentrate on compounds formed with two nouns (NN compounds, or, in the English m...
This thesis is primarily concerned with the status and derivation of linking elements in German (an...
This thesis investigates the changes in whether compound nouns were closed (written as one word), op...
Early New High German N+N compounds are notoriously difficult to identify. This is mostly due to for...
This thesis investigates the changes in whether compound nouns were closed (written as one word), op...
This dataset accompanies a paper to be published in "Morphology" (JOMO, Springer). Under the present...
German linking elements are sometimes classified as inflectional affixes, sometimes as derivational ...
The article delineates the development of nominal synthetic compounding in the history of German. In...