Trubetzkoy's Orphan : Proceedings Of The Montréal Roundtable On "Morphonology: Contemporary Responses" (Montréal, October 1994).
Material type:
- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9789027276209
- 414
- P240.9 -- .M66 1996eb
TRUBETZKOY'S ORPHAN -- Editorial page -- Title page -- Copyright page -- Acknowledgements -- Table of contents -- List of contributors -- Editor's Foreword -- De l'autonomie de la morphophonologie: Discours d'ouverture -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Les données du problème -- 3. Les tendances actuelles -- 4. Morphophonologie et diachronie -- 4.1 Les données -- 4.2 Pour une morphophonologie diachronique -- 5. Conclusion -- I. ALLOMORPHY AND MORPHOPHONOLOGY -- Allomorphy or Morphophonology? -- 1. Locating the Morphology/Phonology Boundary -- 2. Types of Morpholexical Selection -- 3. Allomorphy as Morphological Selection -- 3.1 The Parallelism with Morphological Gaps -- 3.2 Optionality -- 3.3 Locality -- 3.4 The Interaction of Morphology and Phonology -- 4. The Existence of Morphologically Conditioned Phonological Rules -- Where Does Allomorphy Begin? Comments on Kiparsky -- 1. Introductory Remarks -- 2. Features, Morphemes and Morphs -- 3. Status of Allomorphy -- 3.1 Three Positions on Allomorphy -- 3.2 Arguments Against Allomorphy as Replacement -- 3.3 Is Allomorphy a Pairing between Features and Morphs? -- 4. Conclusions -- On the Morphology/Phonology Boundary:Comments on Kiparsky -- Reply to Mohanan and Walker -- Allomorphy and Morphophonology -- II. MODULARITY, MORPHONOLOGY, AND GRADIENCE -- A Functionalist Semiotic Model of Morphonology -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Functional Analysis -- 3. Functionalism and Morphonology -- 4. A Semiotic Model of Morphonology: Level of universalpreference theory -- 5. Diachronic Morphonological Change -- 6. Morphonology in Language Acquisition -- 7. Remarks on the System Adequacy of Morphonology -- 8. Conclusion -- Form & -- Content in a Functionalist Semiotic Model of Morphonology: Comments on Dressier -- On A Functionalist Semiotic Model of Morphonology: Comments on Dressier -- Reply to Janda and Walker.
A Functionalist Semiotic Model of Morphonology -- III. LINGUISTICS WITHOUT MORPHOPHONOLOGY -- Quelques avantages d'une linguistique débarrassée de lamorpho(pho)nologie -- Where Does Morphophonology Belong? Comments on Ford & -- Singh -- 1. Compositionality of Words -- 2. Relatedness of Words -- 2.1 Compositional morphology -- 2.2 Non-Compositional Morphology -- 3. Morphology and Phonology -- 4. Autonomous Phonology -- 5. Conclusions -- Même après le débrouillement il peut rester de la brume":Comments on Ford & -- Singh -- Reply to Mohanan and Janda -- Linguistics without Morphophonology -- IV. MORPHOPROSODY -- Morphoprosody: Some reflections on accent and morphology -- 0. Morphoprosody -- 1. Morphoprosody and Stress Types -- 2. Stress as Morphological Process -- 3. Morphoprosody as Interaction -- 4. Types of Morphoprosodical Interaction -- 5. Grammatical and Prosodic Accent -- 6. Derivation, Inflection, and Stress -- 7. Interactional effects -- 8. Morphoprosody and Diachrony -- 9. Non-Concatenative Inflection -- 10. Prosodic Inflection -- 11. The Syllable in Morphoprosody -- 12. Tone and Morphoprosody -- 13. Generalizations on Morphoprosody -- 14. Prosodic Preferences -- 15. Hierarchical Structure -- 16. Bottom-up Analyses -- 17. Naturalness -- 18. Motifs -- Another view of Prosody and Morphology:Comments on Hurch -- Reply to Piggott -- Morphoprosody -- V. PRODUCTIVITY AND THE LEXICON -- Productivity, Regularity and Fusion:How language use affects the lexicon -- 1. The Network Model -- 2. Productivity, Regularity and Fusion -- 2.1 Productivity -- 2.2 Regularity -- 2.3 Fusion -- 3. The Relations among Productivity, Regularity and Fusion -- 3.1 The Diachronic Source of Morphology -- 3.2 Inflection -- 3.3 Derivational Morphology -- 3.4 The Synchronic Relations Among Productivity, Regularity and Transparency -- 4. The Dual-Processing Model.
5. Level-Ordered Morphology -- 6. Language Acquisition -- 7. Conclusion -- Productivity, Derivational Morphology and Atypical Populations:Comments on Bybee -- 0. Preliminaries -- 1. Frequency and Productivity -- 2. Denominal Verbs -- 3. A Hybrid Model of Inflectional Morphology -- 4. Specific Language Impairment -- A Reply to Goad -- 1. English Denominal Verbs -- 2. Inflectional Morphology in Individuals with Specific LanguageImpairment -- Productivity and the lexicon -- VI. SOME ADDITIONAL CONTRIBUTIONS -- Issues in Morphophonology: A view from the floor -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Three Models of Morphophonology -- 3. The Non-Natural Basis of Morphophonology -- 4. Switch from Iconicity to Indexicality -- 5. Morphemes As Chunks of Sounds -- 6. The Derived Nature of the Parts of Words -- On Morphophonology: A view from the outside -- 1. Language Design -- 2. Shapes of Linguistic Nature -- 3. Words Not Morphs Writ Large -- 4. Free Forms, Free Functions, Relativized -- 5. From Form to Substance -- References -- Index.
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