There is a longstanding debate about how to appropriately model the combinability of affixes, especially English suffixes. One widely accepted principle is the notion of so-called selectional restrictions, i.e. grammatical requirements of particular affixes. For example, the suffix-ness can only combine with adjectival bases. Hay (2002) proposed a psycholinguistic approach to affix ordering now known as Complexity-Based Ordering (CBO), which claims that affix order is determined by the parsability of the affixes, i.e. more separable affixes can appear only outside of less separable affixes. Hay shows that this principle accounts for why many grammatical affix combinations are unattested. CBO has since been supported by research of derivatio...
The article considers the role of morphophonological elements such as stress, alternation of phoneme...
This paper has two goals. The first is to describe the patterns of secondary stress assignment in Ru...
The world’s languages tend to exhibit a suffixing preference, adding inflections to the ends of word...
There is a longstanding debate about how to appropriately model the combinability of affixes, especi...
and Plag & Baayen (2009) have developed an approach in which processing constraints are held acc...
International audienceEnglish morphophonology has aroused considerable interest in the wake of Choms...
The phenomenon of “suffix interference” has been used as evidence for a distinction between inflecti...
This book addresses the complexity of Russian verbal prefixation system that has been extensively st...
There is a long-standing debate about the principles constraining the combinatorial properties of su...
Explaining why affixes occur in the order in which they do in languages has been an issue of much co...
Different morphological theories assign different status to parts of words, roots and affixes. Model...
Adyghe (North West Caucasian, Circassian) is a highly polysynthetic language, that is, in this langu...
The purpose of this article is to argue against the necessity of positing a process of "Scrambl...
Contains fulltext : 6028.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Cross-linguistic ...
In this paper I will analyze the four Natural Perfectives of the simplex verb путатьipf ‘tangle up’,...
The article considers the role of morphophonological elements such as stress, alternation of phoneme...
This paper has two goals. The first is to describe the patterns of secondary stress assignment in Ru...
The world’s languages tend to exhibit a suffixing preference, adding inflections to the ends of word...
There is a longstanding debate about how to appropriately model the combinability of affixes, especi...
and Plag & Baayen (2009) have developed an approach in which processing constraints are held acc...
International audienceEnglish morphophonology has aroused considerable interest in the wake of Choms...
The phenomenon of “suffix interference” has been used as evidence for a distinction between inflecti...
This book addresses the complexity of Russian verbal prefixation system that has been extensively st...
There is a long-standing debate about the principles constraining the combinatorial properties of su...
Explaining why affixes occur in the order in which they do in languages has been an issue of much co...
Different morphological theories assign different status to parts of words, roots and affixes. Model...
Adyghe (North West Caucasian, Circassian) is a highly polysynthetic language, that is, in this langu...
The purpose of this article is to argue against the necessity of positing a process of "Scrambl...
Contains fulltext : 6028.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Cross-linguistic ...
In this paper I will analyze the four Natural Perfectives of the simplex verb путатьipf ‘tangle up’,...
The article considers the role of morphophonological elements such as stress, alternation of phoneme...
This paper has two goals. The first is to describe the patterns of secondary stress assignment in Ru...
The world’s languages tend to exhibit a suffixing preference, adding inflections to the ends of word...