This study focuses on minimal (non-compound, non-phrasal) signs that are nevertheless internally complex in their syntactic categorization. Sometimes this is signalled by morphology - affixation or internal modification. But there are also conversions. In terms of categorial structure, we can distinguish between absorptions, where the source of the base is associated with a distinct category, and incorporation, where the base is categorially constant. Incorporation is thus typically reflected in inflectional morphology. Absorption may be associated with morphological change or conversion - with retention of the base in a different categorization. But categorial complexity may be nonderived, covert: the categorial complexity of an item is ev...
International audienceIn recent decades, research on clear and approximate categorizations and their...
There are many logical possibilities for marking morphological features. However only some of them a...
The notion of complexity in human language is shown to be different from the notion of 'diffciculty'...
This study focuses on minimal (non-compound, non-phrasal) signs that are nevertheless internally co...
The phenomenon of compounding offers an interesting case study for the interaction of the lexicon wi...
Inflectional morphology plays a paradoxical role in language. On the one hand it tells us useful thi...
This paper deals with the impact of the salience of complex words and their constituent parts on lex...
International audienceThis paper deals with the impact of the salience of complex words and their co...
In this talk we will report on recent and ongoing research on large-scale morphosyntactic variation ...
This paper aims at exploring the morphological process of word formation in terms of the analysis of...
Word categories are groups of words in the language that are distinguished based on the presence of ...
This chapter deals with patterns of word-formation, their classification and parameters of cross-lin...
This paper offers a broad empirical morphosyntactic study contributing to three debates in linguisti...
A major contribution of recent research in theoretical linguistics, corpus linguistics and psycholin...
This book aims to assess the nature of morphological complexity, and the properties that distinguish...
International audienceIn recent decades, research on clear and approximate categorizations and their...
There are many logical possibilities for marking morphological features. However only some of them a...
The notion of complexity in human language is shown to be different from the notion of 'diffciculty'...
This study focuses on minimal (non-compound, non-phrasal) signs that are nevertheless internally co...
The phenomenon of compounding offers an interesting case study for the interaction of the lexicon wi...
Inflectional morphology plays a paradoxical role in language. On the one hand it tells us useful thi...
This paper deals with the impact of the salience of complex words and their constituent parts on lex...
International audienceThis paper deals with the impact of the salience of complex words and their co...
In this talk we will report on recent and ongoing research on large-scale morphosyntactic variation ...
This paper aims at exploring the morphological process of word formation in terms of the analysis of...
Word categories are groups of words in the language that are distinguished based on the presence of ...
This chapter deals with patterns of word-formation, their classification and parameters of cross-lin...
This paper offers a broad empirical morphosyntactic study contributing to three debates in linguisti...
A major contribution of recent research in theoretical linguistics, corpus linguistics and psycholin...
This book aims to assess the nature of morphological complexity, and the properties that distinguish...
International audienceIn recent decades, research on clear and approximate categorizations and their...
There are many logical possibilities for marking morphological features. However only some of them a...
The notion of complexity in human language is shown to be different from the notion of 'diffciculty'...