Morphology 2nd Edition by Francis Katamba – Ebook PDF Instant Download/Delivery: 978-0312103569, 0312103565
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Product details:
ISBN 10: 0312103565
ISBN 13: 978-0312103569
Author: Francis Katamba
An introduction to contemporary morphological theory and analysis in generative grammar, this book contains in-text exercises which involve the reader in “doing morphology” by analyzing data from English and other languages. The book is divided into three parts. Part one surveys traditional notions of word-structure which remain fundamental to morphological investigations. Part two explores the relationship between morphology and phonology in current generative grammar, while part three highlights issues in the interaction between morphology and syntax. Francis Katamba has also written “An Introduction to Phonology”.
Table of contents:
PART I BACKGROUND
1 INTRODUCTION
1.1 The Emergence of Morphology
1.2 Morphology in American Structural Linguistics
1.3 The Concept of Chomskyan Generative Grammar
1.3.1 The place of morphology in early generative grammar
1.3.2 The morphology-phonology interaction
1.3.3 The morphology-syntax interaction
1.3.4 The morphology-semantics interface
1.3.5 The lexicon
1.4 Organisation of the Book
2 INTRODUCTION TO WORD-STRUCTURE
2.1 What is a Word?
2.1.1 The lexeme
2.1.2 Word-form
2.1.3 The grammatical word
2.2 Morphemes: The Smallest Units of Meaning
2.2.1 Analysing words
2.2.2 Morphemes, morphs and allomorphs
2.2.3 Grammatical conditioning, lexical conditioning and suppletion
2.2.4 Underlying representations
2.3 The Nature of Morphemes
2.4 Summary
Further Reading
Exercises
3 TYPES OF MORPHEMES
3.1 Roots, Affixes, Stems and Bases
3.1.1 Roots
3.1.2 Affixes
3.1.3 Roots, stems and bases
3.1.4 Stem extenders
3.2 Inflectional and Derivational Morphemes
3.3 Multiple Affixation
3.4 Compounding
3.5 Conversion
3.6 Morphological Haplology
3.7 Morphological Typology
3.8 WP and the Centrality of the Word
Exercises
4 PRODUCTIVITY IN WORD-FORMATION
4.1 The Open-Endedness of the Lexicon
4.1.1 What is productivity?
4.1.2 Semi-productivity
4.1.3 Productivity and creativity
4.2 Constraints on Productivity
4.2.1 Blocking
4.3 Does Productivity Separate Inflection from Derivation?
4.4 The Nature of the Lexicon
4.4.1 Potential words
4.4.2 Knowledge of language and the role of the lexicon
Further Reading
Exercises
PART II MORPHOLOGY AND ITS RELATION TO PHONOLOGY
5 INTRODUCING LEXICAL MORPHOLOGY
5.1 The Lexical Phonology and Morphology Model
5.2 Lexical Strata
5.2.1 Derivation in lexical morphology
5.2.2 Inflection in lexical morphology
5.3 Lexical Rules
5.4 Differences between Lexical and Post-Lexical Rules Further Reading
Exercises
6 INSIGHTS FROM LEXICAL MORPHOLOGY
6.1 Introduction
6.2 Insights
6.2.1 Stratum ordering reflecting morpheme sequencing
6.2.2 Stratum ordering and productivity
6.2.3 Stratum ordering and conversion
6.2.4 The Strict Cycle Condition
Further Reading
Exercises
7 LEXICAL MORPHOLOGY: AN APPRAISAL
7.1 Introduction: The Claims Made by Lexical Phonology
7.2 Criticisms of Lexical Phonology
7.2.1 Are lexical strata determined by affixes rather than roots?
7.2.2 Do affixes uniquely belong to one stratum?
7.2.3 How many strata are needed?
7.2.4 Are phonological rules restricted to one stratum?
7.2.5 Are morphological rules restricted to one stratum?
7.3 Conclusion
Exercises
8 TEMPLATIC MORPHOLOGY
8.1 Introduction
8.2 Phonological Prelude: Autosegmental Phonology
8.2.1 Autosegmental phonology: mapping principles
8.2.2 The skeletal tier
8.3 Root and Pattern Morphology
8.3.1 Arabic Binyanim
8.3.2 Prosodic morphology and non-concatenative morphology
8.3.3 The morpheme tier hypothesis
8.4 Conclusion
Exercises
9 TEMPLATIC AND PROSODIC MORPHOLOGY
9.1 What is Reduplication?
9.2 Is Reduplication Constituent Copying?
9.3 CV Templates and Reduplication
9.3.1 Underspecification
9.3.2 Reduplication as prefixation
9.3.3 Reduplication as suffixation
9.3.4 Internal reduplication
9.3.5 Reduplication and fixed segmentism
9.4 Prosodic Morphology
9.5 Other Prosodic Phenomena
9.5.1 Subiractive morphology
9.5.2 English expletive infixation
9.6 Conclusion
Exercises
10 OPTIMALITY THEORY AND MORPHOLOGY
10.1 Introduction
10.2 The Basics
10.2.1 Notation
10.2.2 The interaction of constraints
10.3 Morphology in Optimality Theory
10.4 Stratal Optimality Theory
10.5 Conclusion
Further Reading
Exercises
PART III MORPHOLOGY AND ITS RELATION TO THE LEXICON AND SYNTAX
11 INFLECTIONAL MORPHOLOGY
11.1 Introduction
11.2 Inflection and Derivation
11.2.1 Differentiating between inflection and derivation
11.2.2 Relevance and generality
11.2.3 Is morphology necessary?
11.3 Verbal Inflectional Categories
11.3.1 Inherent verbal properties
11.3.2 Agreement properties of verbs
11.3.3 Configurational properties of verbs
11.4 Inflectional Categories of Nouns
11.4.1 Inherent categories of nouns
11.4.2 Agreement categories of nouns
11.4.3 Configurational categories of nouns
11.5 Conclusion
Exercises
12 MORPHOLOGICAL MAPPING OF GRAMMATICAL FUNCTIONS
12.1 Introduction
12.2 Predicates, Arguments and Lexical Entries
12.3 Theta-Roles and Lexical Entries
12.4 Grammatical Relations
12.5 Grammatical Function-Changing Rules
12.5.1 Passive
12.5.2 Antipassive
12.5.3 Applications
12.5.4 Causative
12.6 The Mirror Principle
12.7 Incorporation
12.7.1 Noun incorporation
12.7.2 Verb incorporation
12.7.3 Preposition incorporation
12.8 Conclusion
Exercises
13 THE INTERPRETATION OF THE LEXICON, MORPHOLOGY AND SYNTAX
13.1 Introduction: The Interface Between Modules
13.2 Phonological Factors In Compounding
13.3 Are Compounds Different from Syntactic Phrases?
13.3.1 The notion ‘word’ revisited
13.3.2 Listemes
13.3.3 Unlisted morphological objects
13.3.4 Syntactic objects and syntactic atoms
13.4 The Character of Word-Formation Rules
13.4.1 Headedness of compounds
13.4.2 The right-hand head rule (RHR)
13.4.3 Left-headed compounds
13.4.4 Headless compounds
13.5 Compounding and Derivation
13.5.1 Cranberry words
13.5.2 Neoclassical compounds
13.6 Clitics
13.7 Conclusion
Exercises
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