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Introducing Morphology 3rd Revised edition [Kietas viršelis]

3.85/5 (76 ratings by Goodreads)
(University of New Hampshire)
  • Formatas: Hardback, 294 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 250x174x18 mm, weight: 710 g, Worked examples or Exercises
  • Serija: Cambridge Introductions to Language and Linguistics
  • Išleidimo metai: 26-Aug-2021
  • Leidėjas: Cambridge University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1108832482
  • ISBN-13: 9781108832489
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 294 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 250x174x18 mm, weight: 710 g, Worked examples or Exercises
  • Serija: Cambridge Introductions to Language and Linguistics
  • Išleidimo metai: 26-Aug-2021
  • Leidėjas: Cambridge University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1108832482
  • ISBN-13: 9781108832489
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
A lively introduction to morphology, this textbook is intended for undergraduates with relatively little background in linguistics. It shows students how to find and analyze morphological data and presents them with basic concepts and terminology concerning the mental lexicon, inflection, derivation, morphological typology, productivity, and the interfaces between morphology and syntax on the one hand and phonology on the other. By the end of the text students are ready to understand morphological theory and how to support or refute theoretical proposals. Providing data from a wide variety of languages, the text includes hands-on activities designed to encourage students to gather and analyse their own data. The third edition has been thoroughly updated with new examples and exercises. Chapter 2 now includes an updated detailed introduction to using linguistic corpora, and there is a new final chapter covering several current theoretical frameworks.

A lively introduction to morphology, this textbook is intended for undergraduates with relatively little background in linguistics. The third edition has been thoroughly updated, with new examples and exercises and a new final chapter covering several current theoretical frameworks.

Daugiau informacijos

A lively and hands-on introduction, this text is intended for undergraduates with relatively little background in linguistics.
Preface to First Edition ix
Preface to Second Edition xii
Preface to Third Edition xiii
The International Phonetic Alphabet xiv
Point and Manner of Articulation of English Consonants and Vowels xv
1 What Is Morphology?
1(10)
1.1 Introduction
2(1)
1.2 What's a Word?
3(1)
1.3 Words and Lexemes, Types and Tokens
4(1)
1.4 But Is It Really a Word?
5(1)
1.5 Why Do Languages Have Morphology?
5(2)
1.6 The Organization of This Book
7(4)
Summary
8(1)
Exercises
9(2)
2 Words, Dictionaries, and the Mental Lexicon
11(24)
2.1 Introduction
12(1)
2.2 Why Not Check the Dictionary?
13(2)
2.3 The Mental Lexicon
15(10)
2.4 More about Dictionaries
25(10)
Summary
33(1)
Exercises
34(1)
3 Lexeme Formation: The Familiar
35(36)
3.1 Introduction
36(1)
3.2 Kinds of Morphemes
36(3)
3.3 Affixation
39(11)
3.4 Compounding
50(8)
3.5 Conversion
58(2)
3.6 Marvelous Intricacies: How Affixation, Compounding, and Conversion Interact
60(1)
3.7 Minor Processes
60(3)
3.8 How To: Finding Data for Yourself
63(8)
Summary
66(1)
Exercises
67(4)
4 Productivity and Creativity
71(16)
4.1 Introduction
72(1)
4.2 Factors Contributing to Productivity
73(3)
4.3 Restrictions on Productivity
76(1)
4.4 Ways of Measuring Productivity
77(2)
4.5 Historical Changes in Productivity
79(3)
4.6 Productivity versus Creativity
82(5)
Summary
84(1)
Exercises
84(3)
5 Lexeme Formation: Further Afield
87(18)
5.1 Introduction
88(1)
5.2 How To: Morphological Analysis
89(2)
5.3 Affixes: Beyond Prefixes and Suffixes
91(4)
5.4 Internal Stem Change
95(1)
5.5 Reduplication
96(2)
5.6 Templatic Morphology
98(2)
5.7 Subtractive Processes
100(5)
Summary
101(1)
Exercises
101(4)
6 Inflection
105(32)
6.1 Introduction
106(1)
6.2 Types of Inflection
106(13)
6.3 Inflection in English
119(4)
6.4 Paradigms
123(3)
6.5 Inflection and Productivity
126(1)
6.6 Inherent versus Contextual Inflection
127(1)
6.7 Inflection versus Derivation Revisited
128(2)
6.8 How To: More Morphological Analysis
130(7)
Summary
132(1)
Exercises
133(4)
7 Typology
137(28)
7.1 Introduction
138(1)
7.2 Universals and Particulars: A Bit of Linguistic History
138(1)
7.3 The Genius of Languages: What's in Your Toolkit?
139(12)
7.4 Ways of Characterizing Languages
151(7)
7.5 Genetic and Areal Tendencies
158(2)
7.6 Typological Change
160(5)
Summary
160(1)
Exercises
161(4)
8 Words and Sentences: The Interface between Morphology and Syntax
165(16)
8.1 Introduction
166(1)
8.2 Argument Structure and Morphology
166(6)
8.3 On the Borders
172(4)
8.4 Morphological versus Syntactic Expression
176(5)
Summary
178(1)
Exercises
178(3)
9 Sounds and Shapes: The Interface between Morphology and Phonology
181(26)
9.1 Introduction
182(1)
9.2 Allomorphy and Morphophonological Rules
182(8)
9.3 Other Morphology-Phonology Interactions
190(3)
9.4 How To: Morphophonological Analysis
193(4)
9.5 Lexical Strata
197(10)
Summary
201(1)
Exercises
201(6)
10 Theoretical Challenges
207(22)
10.1 Introduction
208(2)
10.2 The Nature of Morphological Rules
210(4)
10.3 Lexical Integrity
214(3)
10.4 Blocking, Competition, and Affix Rivalry
217(2)
10.5 Constraints on Affix Ordering
219(2)
10.6 Bracketing Paradoxes
221(3)
10.7 The Nature of Affixal Polysemy
224(2)
10.8 Reprise: What's Theory?
226(3)
Summary
226(1)
Exercises
226(3)
11 Theories of Morphology
229(22)
11.1 Introduction
230(1)
11.2 Distributed Morphology
231(3)
11.3 Construction Morphology
234(4)
11.4 Paradigm Function Morphology
238(2)
11.5 Natural Morphology
240(3)
11.6 Naive Discriminative Learning
243(2)
11.7 The Lexical Semantic Framework
245(3)
11.8 A Brief Final Meditation on Theories
248(3)
Further Reading
249(2)
Glossary 251(14)
References 265(8)
Index 273
Rochelle Lieber is Professor of Linguistics at the University of New Hampshire, Durham, NH, where she teaches a wide range of courses on theoretical linguistics and the English language. She is the recipient of a Teaching Excellence Award (1990), the Lindberg Award for the Outstanding Teacher and Scholar in Liberal Arts at UNH (2013), and the Bloomfield Award given by the Linguistic Society of America for the Oxford Reference Guide to English Morphology (with Laurie Bauer and Ingo Plag, 2015). She is the author of four monographs, over fifty articles, and book chapters on morphology and related topics, and is the co-editor of three handbooks on morphology.