Sank's Glossary of Linguistics
Morphom-Mos |
MORPHOME
- (Morphology) A function which is purely morphological or has an irreducibly morphological component. The term is particularly used by Martin Maiden (2004) following Mark Aronoff's (1994) identification of morphomic functions and the morphomic level—a level of linguistic structure intermediate between and independent of phonology and syntax. In distinguishing this additional level, Aronoff makes the empirical claim that all mappings from the morphosyntactic level to the level of phonological realization pass through the intermediate morphomic level. | Wikipedia, 2022
- (Morphology) The original definition of a morphome by Aronoff (1994) is that it is a function which determines the distribution of form within the inflectional paradigm and beyond. More importantly, however, morphomes suppose the existence of what Aronoff terms a morphomic level which embodies an empirical claim about the structure of language: "the mapping from morphosyntax to phonological realization is not direct but passes through an intermediate level". This is a strong claim concerning all types of morphological exponence. | Paul O'Neill, 2014
- (Morphology) Three separate claims that are advanced by proponents of the morphome:
- The existence claim is the assertion that there exist morphomes in the narrow sense, i.e. systematic patterns of linguistic exponence whereby an arbitrary set of exponenda is mapped onto an arbitrary set of exponents. The existence claim leads to a diagnosis problem, arising from the fact that morphomicity is defined negatively, and to an analysis question, posed by the task of providing grammatical descriptions of putatively morphomic patterns.
- The no-bias claim holds that there is no learnability asymmetry between morphomic and nonmorphomic patterns: ceteris paribus, the former can be acquired as easily as the latter.
- The morphomic-level claim emerges from one possible answer to the analysis question: it is the hypothesis that there exists a purely morphological level of linguistic representation such that all patterns of exponence, whether morphomic in the narrow sense or not, are mediated by purely morphological categories existing at this level.
| Ricardo Bermúdez-Otero and Ana R. Luís, 2016
MORPHOPHONOLOGY
(Morphology; Phonology) Or, morphophonemics or morphonology. The branch of linguistics that studies the interaction between morphological and phonological or phonetic processes. Its chief focus is the sound changes that take place in morphemes (minimal meaningful units) when they combine to form words.
Morphophonological analysis often involves an attempt to give a series of formal rules or constraints that successfully predict the regular sound changes occurring in the morphemes of a given language. Such a series of rules converts a theoretical underlying representation into a surface form that is actually heard. The units of which the underlying representations of morphemes are composed are sometimes called morphophonemes. The surface form produced by the morphophonological rules may consist of phonemes (which are then subject to ordinary phonological rules to produce speech sounds or phones), or else the morphophonological analysis may bypass the phoneme stage and produce the phones itself. | Wikipedia, 2022
MORPHOPRAGMATICS
(Morphology; Pragmatics) The relationship between morphology and pragmatics, in other words, it investigates pragmatic aspects of patterns created by morphological rules. | Ferenc Kiefer, 2004
MORPHOSYNTACTIC WORD
(Syntax) Abbreviated MWd. Embick and Noyer (2001) make a distinction between two morphological objects, principally morphosyntactic words (MWd) and subwords (SWd),
each of which displays distinct behavior and complies with distinct locality effects. The
two are defined as follows:
MWd
A node X0 is (by definition) a morphosyntactic word (MWd) iff X0 is the highest segment of an X0 not contained in another X.
SWd
A node X0 is a subword (SWd) if X0 is a terminal node and not an MWd.
| Ayoub Loutfi, 2020
MORPHOSYNTAX
- (Morphology; Syntax) Refers to the combination of morphology and syntax. Syntax is the analysis of the internal structure of utterances / sentences—more specifically, how words are put together. Morphology is the analysis of the internal structure of words, including prefixes, suffixes, and other internal changes to words that generally have a meaning (elusive as that meaning sometimes is). Therefore, morphosyntax is the analysis of the internal structure of utterances, both above the word level and below it.
Why combine morphology and syntax? Because grammatical constructions involve both. Consider the examples of the English Numeral Modification Construction (ENMC) in (1):
- English Numeral Modification
one tree
two tree-s
three tree-s
etc.
The ENMC involves both syntax—the order of numeral and noun—and morphology—the form of the noun, singular or plural. A description or analysis of the ENMC must include reference to both: the relative position of numeral and noun, and the inflection of the noun for number. | William Croft, 2022
- (Morphology; Syntax) The relationship between syntax and morphology, as well as how they interact, is called morphosyntax (Dufter and Stark 2017, Bender 2013); the term is also used to underline the fact that syntax and morphology are interrelated (Van Valin Jr and LaPolla 1997). The study of morphosyntax concerns itself with inflection and paradigms, and some approaches to morphosyntax exclude from its domain the phenomena of word formation, compounding, and derivation (Dufter and Stark 2017). Within morphosyntax fall the study of agreement and government (Dufter and Stark 2017). | Wikipedia, 2024
- (Examples) The 76 features fall into 11 groups corresponding to the following broad areas of morphosyntax, each of which we illustrate with one example feature:
- Pronouns
For example, [#3] special forms or phrases for the second person plural pronoun (e.g., youse, y'all, aay', yufela, you together, all of you, you ones / 'uns, you guys, you people, etc.).
- Noun phrase
For example, [#15] group plurals (e.g., That President has two Secretary of States).
- Tense and aspect
For example, [#23] habitual do (e.g., He does catch fish pretty).
- Modal verbs
For example, [#34] double modals (e.g., I tell you what we might should do).
- Verb morphology
For example, [#41] a-prefixing on ing-forms (e.g., They wasn't a-doin' nothin' wrong).
- Adverbs
For example, [#42] adverbs (other than degree modifiers) have same form as adjectives (e.g., He treated her wrong right from the start).
- Negation
For example, [#44] multiple negation / negative concord (e.g., He won't do no harm).
- Agreement
For example, [#57] deletion of be (e.g., She — smart).
- Relativization
For example, [#66] gapping or zero-relativization in subject position (e.g., The man — lives there is a nice chap).
- Complementation
For example, [#71] as what /than what in comparative clauses (e.g., It's harder than what you think it is).
- Discourse organization and word order
For example, [#76] like as a quotative particle (e.g., And she was like, what do you mean?).
| Benedikt Szmrecsanyi and Bernd Kortmann, 2009
MORPHOTACTICS
- (Morphology) The general principles by which the parts of a word form are arranged. | Gregory Stump, 2022
- (Morphology) Refers literally to the question of which morphemes can "touch" or abut each other. But like phonotactics governs the fact that tk is not a licit sequence of consonants to end a syllable, there is often no problem with such sequences across syllables (or distinct words). Thus the study of morphotactics inherently is restricted to a particular domain. | Karlos Arregi and Andrew Nevins, 2022
- (Morphology) The patterns according to which a language's word forms are internally structured constitute its morphotactics. In the morpheme-based approaches to morphology that emerged in the twentieth century, a language's morphotactic principles are constraints on the concatenation of morphemes (a perspective still held by many linguists); in rule-based conceptions of morphology, by contrast, a language's morphotactic principles are constraints on the interaction of its rules of morphology. | Gregory Stump, 2017
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