Maiden / Smith / Goldbach | Morphological Autonomy | Buch | 978-0-19-958998-2 | www.sack.de

Buch, Englisch, 502 Seiten, Format (B × H): 161 mm x 240 mm, Gewicht: 913 g

Maiden / Smith / Goldbach

Morphological Autonomy

Perspectives from Romance Inflectional Morphology
Erscheinungsjahr 2011
ISBN: 978-0-19-958998-2
Verlag: Oxford University Press(UK)

Perspectives from Romance Inflectional Morphology

Buch, Englisch, 502 Seiten, Format (B × H): 161 mm x 240 mm, Gewicht: 913 g

ISBN: 978-0-19-958998-2
Verlag: Oxford University Press(UK)


This book is about the nature of morphology and its place in the structure of grammar. Drawing on a wide range of aspects of Romance inflectional morphology, leading scholars present detailed arguments for the autonomy of morphology, ie morphology has phenomena and mechanisms of its own that are not reducible to syntax or phonology. But which principles and rules govern this independent component and which phenomena can be described or explicated by the mechanisms of
the morphemic level? In shedding light on these questions, this volume constitutes a major contribution to Romance historical morphology in particular, and to our understanding of the nature and importance of morphomic structure in language change in general.

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Weitere Infos & Material


Introduction
Part 1: Autonomous Morphology - Corroborations and Challenges
1: Stephen R. Anderson: Stress-Conditioned Allomorphy in Surmiran (Rumantsch)
2: Martin Maiden: Morphomes and 'Stress-Conditioned Allomorphy' in Romanh
3: Judith Meinschaefer: Accentual Patterns in Romance Verb Forms
4: Paul O'Neill: Morphomes, Morphemes, and Morphological Segmentation: Evidence From Ibero-Romance
5: Sascha Gaglia: Representational Aspects of Morphomic Vowel variation in Southern Italy
6: Andrew Swearingen: The Romance Imperative, Irregular Morphology, Syncretism, and the Morphome
7: Vito Pirrelli, Marcello Ferro, and Basilio Calderone: Learning Paradigms in Time and Space. Computational Evidence From Romance Languages
8: Rafael Linares: Conjugations and Complex Stems in Spanish Verbs: Generalization Properties and Priming Effects
Part 2: Evolution of Stem Allomorphy
9: Max Wheeler: The Evolution of a Morphome in Catalan Verb Inflection
10: Maria Goldbach: Metaphony in Portuguese 3rd Class -o(C)C-ir and -u(C)C-ir Verbs - Comparison With Modern Galician and Mediaeval Galician-Portuguese
11: Ana R. Luis: Morphomic Structure and Loan-Verb Integration: Evidence From Lusophone Creoles
Part 3: Interfaces With Syntax or Semantics?
12: Xu, Zheng and mark Aronoff: A Realization Optimality-Theoretic Approach to Full and Partial Identity of Forms
13: Marc-Olivier Hinzelin: Syncretism and Suppletion in Gallo-Romance Verb Paradigms
14: John Charles Smith: Variable Analyses of a Verbal Inflection in (mainly) Canadian French
15: Michele Loporcaro: Syncretism and neutralization in the Marking of Romance Object Agreement
16: Anna M. Thornton: Overabundance (Multiple Forms Realizing the Same Cell): A Non-Canonical Phenomenon in Italian Verb Morphology
17: Cinzia Russi: Clitics of Italian Verbi Procomplementari: What are They?
18: Catherine Taylor: Periphrasis in Romance
19: Nigel Vincent: Non-Finite Forms, Periphrases, and Autonomous Morphology in Latin and Romance
References
Index


Maria Goldbach studied linguistics of the Romance languages at the Universities of Aix-en-Provence and Hamburg. She was assistant professor for the linguistics of Romance languages at the University of Hamburg. Currently, she is a research assistant at the University of Oxford in the research project 'Autonomous Morphology in Diachrony: Comparative evidence from the Romance languages'

Marc-Olivier Hinzelin studied Romance and General Linguistics in Hamburg and Lyon 2. He worked as a Research Assistant in Hamburg and Konstanz as well as in the research project 'Autonomous Morphology in Diachrony: Comparative evidence from Romance Languages' in Oxford. He is now Maître de Conférences at the Institut de Linguistique Romane Pierre Gardette at the Université Catholique de Lyon.

Martin Maiden is Professor of the Romance Languages at the University of Oxford, the Director of the Research Centre for Romance Linguistics, University of Oxford, and Fellow of Trinity College at Oxford. His main research interests are historical and comparative linguistics of the Romance Languages, especially Romanian and Italo-Romance linguistics, and morphological theory.

John Charles Smith has been Fellow and Tutor in French Linguistics at St Catherine's College since 1997. Before returning to Oxford, where he was a student, he held appointments at the Universities of Surrey, Bath, and Manchester. He has also held visiting appointments in Paris, Limoges, Berlin, Melbourne, and Philadelphia. His main field of interest is historical morphosyntax, and he has published widely on agreement, refunctionalization, deixis, and the evolution of case and pronoun systems,
with particular reference to Romance. He is Secretary of the International Society for Historical Linguistics, Deputy Director of the University of Oxford Research Centre for Romance Linguistics, and co-editor of the Cambridge History of the Romance Languages. In 2007, he was created chevalier dans
l'ordre des Palmes académiques by the French Government, for services to the French language and French culture.



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