In a series of publications, Stephen Anderson developed the idea that the definition of a language’s inflectional morphology involves blocks of realization rules such that (i) realization rules’ order of application follows from the ordering of the blocks to which they belong and (ii) realization rules belonging to the same block stand in a relation of paradigmatic opposition. A question that naturally arises from this conception of rule interaction is whether it is possible for the same rule to figure in the application of more than one block. I discuss two systems of verb inflection exploiting exactly this possibility -- those of Limbu and Southern Sotho. In order to account for the special properties of such systems, I argue that in th...
This article probes into the nature of discontinuous elements in the morphology of some Africanlangu...
Inflectional paradigms come in two possible flavours: either the forms line up with the featural sy...
Proceedings of the Sixteenth Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society (1990), pp. 17-2
A new contribution to linguistic theory, this book presents a formal framework for the analysis of w...
Inflectional classes are classes of lexemes which share a content paradigm (they inflect for the sam...
A current debate in morphological theory is concerned with the status of paradigms. For Lieber (1992...
The paper discusses the notion of morphological complexity, with a focus on stem patterns. Stem patt...
The last few years have seen the emergence of several clearly articulated alternative approaches to ...
This paper discusses the nature of inflection classes (ICs) and provides a fully im-plemented method...
This paper is concerned with inflectional morphology. Its point of departure is the old insight that...
Languages differ in their sound patterns, but these differences are, to a large extent, systematic. ...
This thesis offers a systematic treatment of discontinuous exponence, a pattern of inflection in whi...
In intuitive terms to be sharpened below, the micromorphology hypothesis is the hypothesis that an a...
The present article examines whether derivational morphology shows evidence of an associative memory...
Syncretism--where a single form serves two or more morphosyntactic functions--is a persistent proble...
This article probes into the nature of discontinuous elements in the morphology of some Africanlangu...
Inflectional paradigms come in two possible flavours: either the forms line up with the featural sy...
Proceedings of the Sixteenth Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society (1990), pp. 17-2
A new contribution to linguistic theory, this book presents a formal framework for the analysis of w...
Inflectional classes are classes of lexemes which share a content paradigm (they inflect for the sam...
A current debate in morphological theory is concerned with the status of paradigms. For Lieber (1992...
The paper discusses the notion of morphological complexity, with a focus on stem patterns. Stem patt...
The last few years have seen the emergence of several clearly articulated alternative approaches to ...
This paper discusses the nature of inflection classes (ICs) and provides a fully im-plemented method...
This paper is concerned with inflectional morphology. Its point of departure is the old insight that...
Languages differ in their sound patterns, but these differences are, to a large extent, systematic. ...
This thesis offers a systematic treatment of discontinuous exponence, a pattern of inflection in whi...
In intuitive terms to be sharpened below, the micromorphology hypothesis is the hypothesis that an a...
The present article examines whether derivational morphology shows evidence of an associative memory...
Syncretism--where a single form serves two or more morphosyntactic functions--is a persistent proble...
This article probes into the nature of discontinuous elements in the morphology of some Africanlangu...
Inflectional paradigms come in two possible flavours: either the forms line up with the featural sy...
Proceedings of the Sixteenth Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society (1990), pp. 17-2