The present paper explores the change in distribution and potential function as well as the interplay of two phenomena that occur at the internal boundaries of nominal compounds, namely linking elements and hyphenation. About 40% of present-day German compounds contain a linking element, most prominently -s- (e.g. Geburt-s-ort ‘birth place’). Numerous theories have been brought forward to explain its function, two of which are examined here: It will be shown that the linking-s tends to mark morphologically complex constituents while the assumption that it prefers marked phonological words cannot be corroborated. Linked compounds in present-day German use hyphenation, a strategy that is mostly employed with graphematically or phonologically...
This dataset accompanies a paper to be published in "Morphology" (JOMO, Springer). Under the present...
The present study focuses on the contraction of German compounds with an identical component in diff...
Intuitions about syllable structure have direct implications for the practical problem of hyphenatio...
Present-day German uses two formally different patterns of compounding in N+N compounds. The first c...
This article addresses the linking element -s- concerning its distribution and functionality in dial...
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. ...
German linking elements are sometimes classified as inflectional affixes, sometimes as derivational ...
Hyphenated compounds have largely been neglected in the studies of compounding, which have seldom an...
This article compares linking elements occurring in nominal compounds in German, Dutch, Swedish and...
This thesis is primarily concerned with the status and derivation of linking elements in German (an...
Linking elements such as -s in German Versicherung-s-vertreter are found in between the parts of wor...
This thesis investigates the changes in whether compound nouns were closed (written as one word), op...
Hyphenated compounds have largely been neglected in the studies of compounding, which have seldom an...
This paper examines whether the selection of linking elements for novel German compounds can be bett...
This dataset accompanies a paper to be published in "Morphology" (JOMO, Springer). Under the present...
The present study focuses on the contraction of German compounds with an identical component in diff...
Intuitions about syllable structure have direct implications for the practical problem of hyphenatio...
Present-day German uses two formally different patterns of compounding in N+N compounds. The first c...
This article addresses the linking element -s- concerning its distribution and functionality in dial...
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. ...
German linking elements are sometimes classified as inflectional affixes, sometimes as derivational ...
Hyphenated compounds have largely been neglected in the studies of compounding, which have seldom an...
This article compares linking elements occurring in nominal compounds in German, Dutch, Swedish and...
This thesis is primarily concerned with the status and derivation of linking elements in German (an...
Linking elements such as -s in German Versicherung-s-vertreter are found in between the parts of wor...
This thesis investigates the changes in whether compound nouns were closed (written as one word), op...
Hyphenated compounds have largely been neglected in the studies of compounding, which have seldom an...
This paper examines whether the selection of linking elements for novel German compounds can be bett...
This dataset accompanies a paper to be published in "Morphology" (JOMO, Springer). Under the present...
The present study focuses on the contraction of German compounds with an identical component in diff...
Intuitions about syllable structure have direct implications for the practical problem of hyphenatio...