This paper proposes a meaning-based contrastive methodology for the study of prefixation in English, French and Italian which is easily adaptable to other languages and word-formation processes. Our discussion centres on some of the central methodological and theoretical issues involved in contrastive lexical morphology, an area which, to date, has largely remained under-researched. Precise defining criteria for derivative (and prefix) status are presented in order to decide what counts as a derivative (or as a prefix) and what does not. Emphasis is also put on a fined-grained semantic tertium comparationis elaborated for the cross-linguistic investigation of lexical morphology and based on a six-tiered semantic categorisation, viz. locatio...
This paper proposes an exploratory cross-linguistic bird's eye-view of negative lexical morphology b...
This paper describes in details the first version of Morphonette, a new French morpho-logical resour...
Latinate or Greek prefixes are extremely productive when attaching to Latinate or Greek verbal or no...
This thesis presents a contrastive analysis of prefixation in English and French writing. More gener...
This special issue of Poznań Studies in Contemporary Linguistics aims to examine the field of contra...
Our assumption is the fact that a speaker's lexical competence depends on at least two factors: the ...
This paper proposes an exploratory cross-linguistic bird’s eye-view of negative lexical morphology b...
This paper proposes an exploratory bird’s-eye view of contrastive word-formation research, an area w...
In this study, we questioned the role and the place of constructional morphology in bilingual dictio...
This paper concentrates on the (dis-)similarities in meaning and uses of intensifying affixes across...
Among studies on morphological typology, the issue of asymmetries in affix position has often drawn ...
This article treats the problem of how the semantics of word formation can be accounted for in terms...
The typology of prefixes on a semantic plan has not been highlighted enough because they are not the...
Adjectivalization is the derivation of adjectives from a verb, a noun, an adjective, and occasionall...
This paper applies the word-based model to the description of the Sardinian prefixes. There are case...
This paper proposes an exploratory cross-linguistic bird's eye-view of negative lexical morphology b...
This paper describes in details the first version of Morphonette, a new French morpho-logical resour...
Latinate or Greek prefixes are extremely productive when attaching to Latinate or Greek verbal or no...
This thesis presents a contrastive analysis of prefixation in English and French writing. More gener...
This special issue of Poznań Studies in Contemporary Linguistics aims to examine the field of contra...
Our assumption is the fact that a speaker's lexical competence depends on at least two factors: the ...
This paper proposes an exploratory cross-linguistic bird’s eye-view of negative lexical morphology b...
This paper proposes an exploratory bird’s-eye view of contrastive word-formation research, an area w...
In this study, we questioned the role and the place of constructional morphology in bilingual dictio...
This paper concentrates on the (dis-)similarities in meaning and uses of intensifying affixes across...
Among studies on morphological typology, the issue of asymmetries in affix position has often drawn ...
This article treats the problem of how the semantics of word formation can be accounted for in terms...
The typology of prefixes on a semantic plan has not been highlighted enough because they are not the...
Adjectivalization is the derivation of adjectives from a verb, a noun, an adjective, and occasionall...
This paper applies the word-based model to the description of the Sardinian prefixes. There are case...
This paper proposes an exploratory cross-linguistic bird's eye-view of negative lexical morphology b...
This paper describes in details the first version of Morphonette, a new French morpho-logical resour...
Latinate or Greek prefixes are extremely productive when attaching to Latinate or Greek verbal or no...