The term morphological reversal describes the situation where the members of a morphological opposition switch their functions in some context (as with Hebrew gender marking, where -Ø ~ -a marks masculine ~ feminine with adjectives but feminineymasculine with numerals). There is a long tradition of polemic against the notion that morphology can encode systematic reversals, and an equally long tradition of reintroducing them under different names (e.g. polarity, exchange rules or morphosyntactic toggles). An examination of some unjustly neglected examples (number in Nehan, aspect in Tubatulabal, tense in Trique and argument marking in Neo-Aramaic) confirms the existence of morphological reversal, particularly as a mechanism of language chang...
Morphological syncretism occurs in languages when one morphological category ‘merges’ with another. ...
A fellowship from the American Council of Learned Societies Joint Committee on Eastern Europe
This paper notes that word-class-changing markers can be inflectional, so that the property of being...
Nonconcatenative morphology refers to a type of word formation involving modification of the interna...
This paper discusses two different directions in morphological change: from full form to suffix and ...
Beliefs about a language rarely correspond to how it is used. This is especially true for Hebrew, a ...
Morphological change is not a result of mechanical, predictable processes, but of the behavior of la...
Agreement is a syntactic mechanism involving morpho-syntactic categories such as person, number, gen...
The alignment splits in the Neo-Aramaic languages display a considerable degree of diversity, especi...
This study addresses the correlation between valence changing operations and morpho-phonology in Mod...
Each MMM has a specific topic that forms one of the criteria for the selection of abstracts. The top...
Studies of lexical access have benefited from comparisons between languages like English, which show...
Studies of lexical access have benefited from comparisons between languages like English, which show...
This paper argues for a strong distinction between morphological and syntactic processes, as the man...
In recent years, considerable attention has been devoted to the mismatches that often exist between ...
Morphological syncretism occurs in languages when one morphological category ‘merges’ with another. ...
A fellowship from the American Council of Learned Societies Joint Committee on Eastern Europe
This paper notes that word-class-changing markers can be inflectional, so that the property of being...
Nonconcatenative morphology refers to a type of word formation involving modification of the interna...
This paper discusses two different directions in morphological change: from full form to suffix and ...
Beliefs about a language rarely correspond to how it is used. This is especially true for Hebrew, a ...
Morphological change is not a result of mechanical, predictable processes, but of the behavior of la...
Agreement is a syntactic mechanism involving morpho-syntactic categories such as person, number, gen...
The alignment splits in the Neo-Aramaic languages display a considerable degree of diversity, especi...
This study addresses the correlation between valence changing operations and morpho-phonology in Mod...
Each MMM has a specific topic that forms one of the criteria for the selection of abstracts. The top...
Studies of lexical access have benefited from comparisons between languages like English, which show...
Studies of lexical access have benefited from comparisons between languages like English, which show...
This paper argues for a strong distinction between morphological and syntactic processes, as the man...
In recent years, considerable attention has been devoted to the mismatches that often exist between ...
Morphological syncretism occurs in languages when one morphological category ‘merges’ with another. ...
A fellowship from the American Council of Learned Societies Joint Committee on Eastern Europe
This paper notes that word-class-changing markers can be inflectional, so that the property of being...