This manuscript sets forth an in-depth study of competing pairs of prefixes of Greek and Latin origin: hyper- vs. super-, micro- vs. mini-, and polyvs. multi- from a contrastive Spanish-English perspective. Two major source corpora, the Corpus de Referencia del Español Actual for Spanish, and the British National Corpus for English were used for the purpose of this research. The prefixes were further analysed within the framework of a corpus of 200 translational equivalences, compiled from a lexicographic bilingual source, the Oxford Spanish Dictionary (2003); the results were then corroborated with the use of the prefixed words in a bilingual text-based online source, Linguee. This research sheds light on similarities and di...
English suffixes have been the object of sustained inquiry across most phonological schools and para...
This paper is based on comparative data on Danish and Spanish, and argues that systematic variations...
AbstractFor various reasons, phrasal nouns —i.e. start-up, spin off, etc.— often integrate as loan w...
This manuscript sets forth an in-depth study of competing pairs of prefixes of Greek and Latin origi...
This thesis presents a contrastive analysis of prefixation in English and French writing. More gener...
Latinate or Greek prefixes are extremely productive when attaching to Latinate or Greek verbal or no...
p. 463-495This paper is an English-Spanish corpus-based contrastive study of multiple modification w...
This study examines the phenomena of equivalence and congruence of English and Spanish suffixes thro...
Suffix borrowing and conflict through Latin-Greek hybrid formations In the widely explored domain...
Clipping and linguistic variation are inexorably interconnected. Shortened or elliptical words refle...
Medieval Hispano-Romance was rich in neologisms created through suffixal derivation. Almost all the ...
Prefixation in Lithuanian and Spanish: Comparative Aspect. Bachelor's thesis, "Prefixation in Lithua...
Medieval Hispano-Romance was rich in neologisms created through suffixal derivation. Almost all the ...
International audienceThe study aims to specify the role of morphological information in the archite...
This diploma thesis takes a comprehensive look at the matter of prefixation in contemporary Spanish ...
English suffixes have been the object of sustained inquiry across most phonological schools and para...
This paper is based on comparative data on Danish and Spanish, and argues that systematic variations...
AbstractFor various reasons, phrasal nouns —i.e. start-up, spin off, etc.— often integrate as loan w...
This manuscript sets forth an in-depth study of competing pairs of prefixes of Greek and Latin origi...
This thesis presents a contrastive analysis of prefixation in English and French writing. More gener...
Latinate or Greek prefixes are extremely productive when attaching to Latinate or Greek verbal or no...
p. 463-495This paper is an English-Spanish corpus-based contrastive study of multiple modification w...
This study examines the phenomena of equivalence and congruence of English and Spanish suffixes thro...
Suffix borrowing and conflict through Latin-Greek hybrid formations In the widely explored domain...
Clipping and linguistic variation are inexorably interconnected. Shortened or elliptical words refle...
Medieval Hispano-Romance was rich in neologisms created through suffixal derivation. Almost all the ...
Prefixation in Lithuanian and Spanish: Comparative Aspect. Bachelor's thesis, "Prefixation in Lithua...
Medieval Hispano-Romance was rich in neologisms created through suffixal derivation. Almost all the ...
International audienceThe study aims to specify the role of morphological information in the archite...
This diploma thesis takes a comprehensive look at the matter of prefixation in contemporary Spanish ...
English suffixes have been the object of sustained inquiry across most phonological schools and para...
This paper is based on comparative data on Danish and Spanish, and argues that systematic variations...
AbstractFor various reasons, phrasal nouns —i.e. start-up, spin off, etc.— often integrate as loan w...