Suppletion is where the word-forms of the same lexeme have phonologically distinct stems. A study of thirty languages shows it to be surprisingly widespread, suggesting resistance to the pressure of paradigmatic levelling. While a major factor in its preservation appears to be the high frequency of the items that display it, two other factors are in operation, the type of inflectional category involved and the nature of the distribution of stems
This study involves the existence in Megleno-Romanian dialects of a lexically suppletive distinction...
The goal of this thesis is to develop a model of sociolinguistic variation that takes into account ...
Since 2011 the comprehensive, electronically available sources of the Leipzig Corpora Collection hav...
The phenomenon of suppletion, as found in English go~went where different inflectional forms of the ...
Suppletion is a term used to describe the occurrence of unpredictable and irregular patterns. Althou...
Suppletion manifests itself when some of forms of a word are based on different stems, such as the o...
This article presents a sample-based typological account of suppletion in nouns and adjectives. The ...
The purpose of this paper is to present a general approach to verbal inflection with special emphasi...
Suppletion impacts on theories of the lexicon, language change and language acquisition, and for thi...
We specify a typology for the extreme of inflectional morphology, namely suppletion (as in go ~ went...
This paper discusses verbal stem allomorphy in Romance within the framework of Distributed Morpholog...
As a type of irregularity and anomaly, suppletion has been widely investigated in Indo-European lang...
The article deals with the relationship between the existing four noun accent paradigms and their fr...
In usage-based models, it is generally acknowledged that the frequency of use of a lexical item infl...
Claims that markedness influences morphological change do not fit attested patterns of suppletive re...
This study involves the existence in Megleno-Romanian dialects of a lexically suppletive distinction...
The goal of this thesis is to develop a model of sociolinguistic variation that takes into account ...
Since 2011 the comprehensive, electronically available sources of the Leipzig Corpora Collection hav...
The phenomenon of suppletion, as found in English go~went where different inflectional forms of the ...
Suppletion is a term used to describe the occurrence of unpredictable and irregular patterns. Althou...
Suppletion manifests itself when some of forms of a word are based on different stems, such as the o...
This article presents a sample-based typological account of suppletion in nouns and adjectives. The ...
The purpose of this paper is to present a general approach to verbal inflection with special emphasi...
Suppletion impacts on theories of the lexicon, language change and language acquisition, and for thi...
We specify a typology for the extreme of inflectional morphology, namely suppletion (as in go ~ went...
This paper discusses verbal stem allomorphy in Romance within the framework of Distributed Morpholog...
As a type of irregularity and anomaly, suppletion has been widely investigated in Indo-European lang...
The article deals with the relationship between the existing four noun accent paradigms and their fr...
In usage-based models, it is generally acknowledged that the frequency of use of a lexical item infl...
Claims that markedness influences morphological change do not fit attested patterns of suppletive re...
This study involves the existence in Megleno-Romanian dialects of a lexically suppletive distinction...
The goal of this thesis is to develop a model of sociolinguistic variation that takes into account ...
Since 2011 the comprehensive, electronically available sources of the Leipzig Corpora Collection hav...