Native English speakers tend to exclude regular plural inflection when producing English noun-noun compounds (e.g., rat-eater not rats-eater) while allowing irregular plural inflection within compounds (e.g., mice-eater) (Clahsen, 1995; Gordon, 1985; Hayes, Smith and Murphy, 2005; Lardiere, 1995; Murphy, 2000). Exposure to the input alone has been considered insufficient to explain this dissociation between regular and irregular plurals in compounds because naturally occurring compounds in English rarely have plurals of any type included within them (e.g., Gordon, 1985). However, the constraint on the production of plural inflection in English compounds could be derived from the patterns in which regular plural and possessive morphemes occu...
Compound words with irregular plural nouns in first position (e.g. mice-eater) are produced far mor...
This article investigates the acquisition of English synthetic compounding by native Spanish and nat...
In our corpus extracted from LDCE (2003) I have noted some examples of the lexical plurals with s in...
Native English speakers tend to exclude regular plural inflection when producing English noun-noun c...
The definitive version is available at www3.interscience.wiley.com Copyright Wiley [Full text of thi...
Native English speakers include irregular plurals in English noun-noun compounds (e.g. mice chaser) ...
Copyright British Psychological Society. DOI: 10.1348/000712605X48962 [Full text of this article is ...
The treatment of plural morphemes in English noun-noun compounds is significant because it provides ...
Native English speakers include irregular plurals in English noun-noun compounds (e.g. mice chaser) ...
Native English speakers include irregular plurals in English noun-noun compounds (e.g. mice chaser) ...
Morphological systems are constrained in how they interact with each other. One case that has been w...
This paper addresses the issue of intra-personal variability in second Language development, stating...
The avoidance of regular but not irregular plurals inside compounds (e.g., *rats eater vs. mice eate...
There is some evidence that semantics, conceptual features, and phonology interact with syntactic pr...
Experimental evidence indicates that regular plurals are nearly always omitted from English compound...
Compound words with irregular plural nouns in first position (e.g. mice-eater) are produced far mor...
This article investigates the acquisition of English synthetic compounding by native Spanish and nat...
In our corpus extracted from LDCE (2003) I have noted some examples of the lexical plurals with s in...
Native English speakers tend to exclude regular plural inflection when producing English noun-noun c...
The definitive version is available at www3.interscience.wiley.com Copyright Wiley [Full text of thi...
Native English speakers include irregular plurals in English noun-noun compounds (e.g. mice chaser) ...
Copyright British Psychological Society. DOI: 10.1348/000712605X48962 [Full text of this article is ...
The treatment of plural morphemes in English noun-noun compounds is significant because it provides ...
Native English speakers include irregular plurals in English noun-noun compounds (e.g. mice chaser) ...
Native English speakers include irregular plurals in English noun-noun compounds (e.g. mice chaser) ...
Morphological systems are constrained in how they interact with each other. One case that has been w...
This paper addresses the issue of intra-personal variability in second Language development, stating...
The avoidance of regular but not irregular plurals inside compounds (e.g., *rats eater vs. mice eate...
There is some evidence that semantics, conceptual features, and phonology interact with syntactic pr...
Experimental evidence indicates that regular plurals are nearly always omitted from English compound...
Compound words with irregular plural nouns in first position (e.g. mice-eater) are produced far mor...
This article investigates the acquisition of English synthetic compounding by native Spanish and nat...
In our corpus extracted from LDCE (2003) I have noted some examples of the lexical plurals with s in...