Morphology: A Distributed Morphology Introduction Jeffrey P. Punske ebook#
Page: 304
Format: pdf / epub / kindle
ISBN: 9781119667834
Publisher: Wiley
The first comprehensive morphology textbook written in the framework of Distributed Morphology, firmly grounded in cross-linguistic theory Distributed Morphology is the theoretical framework that views morphology as syntactic, proposing that there is no divide between the construction of words and the construction of sentences. The first text of its kind, Morphology: A Distributed Morphology Introduction provides a thorough overview of Distributed Morphology using data and problem sets from a diverse selection of the world’s languages. Divided into two parts, this valuable resource begins by describing the basics of morphology and then moves into an exploration of more advanced topics in morphology including morphosyntactic operations, cyclic derivation, the Mirror Principle, and non-compositional language. Each chapter includes a glossary of key terms, learning objectives, further readings, and illustrative examples to reinforce learning. Exercises and problem sets encourage students to develop their understanding and build confidence in the application of theory to practice. Through this valuable text, students will develop comprehension in morphological parsing and glossing, the concept of the lexicon, the different types of morphemes, the idea of paradigms, the basic practice of morphological analysis, and more. Offering detailed yet accessible coverage of morphological theory from the perspective of Distributed Morphology, this textbook: Introduces the methodology used in morphology, the basic assumptions of Distributed Morphology, and key concepts from lexical grammatical approaches to language Covers essential phonology, feature interaction, paradigms as linguistic objects, core ideas of syntax and syntactic derivation, and derivation and inflection in Distributed Morphology Includes a Quick Reference Guide with glossing abbreviations from the Leipzig Glossing Rules, a full IPA chart with instructions, and charts of phonological features Provides access to a companion website containing solutions to problem sets and additional instructor resources Morphology: A Distributed Morphology Introduction is the ideal textbook for advanced undergraduates and graduate students in morphology courses or with an interest in specializing in morphology. Offering students an unparalleled overview of this growing field of morphology, this text will ensure that developing morphologists are well-equipped to employ the latest methods in Distributed Morphology to their own research and study.The syntax-semantics interface in distributed morphology Distributed Morphology (DM; Halle & Marantz 1993; Marantz 1997) is founded on the premise that the syntax is the only computational component of the grammar Distributed Morphology as a regular relation 1 Introduction. This research reorganizes the Distributed Morphol- ogy (DM, (Halle and Marantz, 1993)) framework to work over strings. Distributed morphology. | PPT There is an interface between morphology and syntax The theory of Distributed Morphology proposes an architecture of grammar in which a single genarative Distributed Morphology and the syntax Bobaljik (. ) summarizes the assumptions of Distributed Morphology (DM). – e founding work on DM is considered to be Halle and Marantz , but the A Distributed Morphology Introduction Distributed Morphology is the theoretical framework that views morphology as syntactic, proposing that there is no divide between the construction of words and Distributed Morphology & X-bar theory overlap? : r/linguistics In DM, the job of morphology is to take a syntactic structure, and turn it into something that the phonological component can interpret. For (PDF) Distributed Morphology and the Syntax TL;DR: The second edition of the introduction to the study of word-formation is presented in this paper, which introduces the use of new corpora and data bases, Two Types of Compounds in Distributed Morphology introducing the mechanistn of creating a word in Distributed Morphology. 3.1. Two rypes of Words and Revising Harley's Definition of Compounds. Marantz (200 Distributed Morphology: Most Up-to-Date Encyclopedia, In generative linguistics, distributed morphology is a theoretical framework introduced in 1993 by Morris Halle and Alec Marantz.