Department of Linguistics, New York University

Suggestions

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34 Comments

  1. Christine

    Berg et al. (2023) Are some morphological units more prone to spelling variation than others? A case study using spontaneous handwritten data
    https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11525-023-09417-4

    Kim (2023) Grammatical and lexical sources of allomorphy in Amuzgo inflectional tone.
    https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/phonology/article/grammatical-and-lexical-sources-of-allomorphy-in-amuzgo-inflectional-tone/680F62BEE10DAA7CA5216617CFDD4F22

  2. Stefan Pophristic

    Suggested by Naomi:
    Corbett, G.G. Pluralia tantum nouns and the theory of features: a typology of nouns with non-canonical number properties. Morphology 29, 51–108 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11525-018-9336-0

  3. Web Designer

    Morphologically assigned accent and an initial three syllable window in Ese’eja
    Nicholas Rolle and Marine Vuillermet

  4. Nursery

    Watanabe (2015). Valuation as deletion: inverse in Jemez and Kiowa

  5. Healthy Food Blogger

    Morphological opacity: Rules of referral in Kanum verbs. In Baerman, Brown & Corbett (eds.), Understanding and measuring morphological complexity.

  6. met solar

    Watanabe (2015). Valuation as deletion: inverse in Jemez and Kiowa.

  7. Kate

    Royer (2022). Prosody as syntactic evidence. NLLT

    https://doi-org.proxy.library.nyu.edu/10.1007/s11049-021-09506-1

  8. LEWIS POTTS

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  9. Utku Mimarlik

    ic mekan tasarimi ve mimari projeler. ozel konutlardan ofislere, binalardan alısveris merkezlerine, yerlesim alanlarina kadar her boyutta mimari tasarim firmasi https://www.utkumimarlik.com

  10. Kate

    Martina Martinovic (2021). Feature Geometry and Head-Splitting in the Wolof Clausal Periphery
    Just accepted to Linguistic Inquiry

  11. SleepZee.co

    Morphologically assigned accent and an initial three syllable window in Ese’eja
    Nicholas Rolle and Marine Vuillermet

    http://ling.auf.net/lingbuzz/003280

  12. Anna Szabolcsi

    I just see this book on LINGUIST: https://linguistlist.org/issues/31/31-2760/
    The Interaction of Functional Morphemes inside the Nominal Phrase: Kloudová
    It might be interesting to pick a chapter, or a related article (in case one hasn’t been discussed recently).

  13. Hagen Blix

    Trommer (2020) – The subsegmental structure of German plural allomorphy
    https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11049-020-09479-7

  14. Yining Nie

    Akkuş, Faruk. On Iranian case and agreement. Natural Language and Linguistic Theory (2019).
    https://doi.org/10.1007/s11049-019-09457-8

  15. Anna Szabolcsi

    How about, How to be positive
    Guido Vanden Wyngaerd, Michal Starke, Karen De Clercq, Pavel Caha
    September 2019
    lingbuzz/004806

  16. Soo-Hwan Lee

    Choi, J., & Harley, H. B. (2019). Locality domains and morphological rules: Phases, heads, node-sprouting and suppletion in Korean honorification. Natural Language and Linguistic Theory.

    https://doi.org/10.1007/s11049-018-09438-3

  17. Yining

    Preminger, O. (2019). What the PCC tells us about “abstract” agreement, head movement, and locality. Glossa: A Journal of General Linguistics, 4(1), 13. DOI: http://doi.org/10.5334/gjgl.315

  18. Guy

    Kastner 2018: Templatic morphology as an emergent property

    https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs11049-018-9419-y

  19. maria gouskova

    Ostrove, J. Nat Lang Linguist Theory (2018) Stretching, spanning, and linear adjacency in Vocabulary Insertion. 36: 1263. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11049-018-9399-y

    https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007%2Fs11049-018-9399-y.pdf

  20. Alicia Parrish

    A suggestion for neuro-morphbeer: there’s a pretty new meta-analysis of EEG, MEG, and fMRI studies that look at morphological processing. Leminen, A., Smolka, E., Dunabeitia, J. & Pliatsikas, C. (2018) Morphological processing in the brain: The good (inflection), the bad (derivation) and the ugly (compounding). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cortex.2018.08.016

  21. Omar Agha

    Arregi, K., and A. Nevins. 2018. Beware Occam’s Syntactic Razor: Morphotactic Analysis and Spanish Mesoclisis. LI: 625-683

  22. Yining Nie

    Scott Grimm. (2018). Grammatical number and the scale of individuation. Language 94: 527-574.
    http://muse.jhu.edu/article/702685

    • Omar Agha

      Seconded!

  23. Mary R

    Myler, N. (2018). Complex copula systems as suppletive allomorphy. Glossa: a journal of general linguistics, 3(1), 51. DOI: http://doi.org/10.5334/gjgl.214

  24. Maria Gouskova

    https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11049-017-9365-0
    Universal markedness in gradable adjectives revisited
    The morpho-semantics of the positive form in Arabic

    Cross-linguistically, comparative-form adjectives (like English taller) are consistently derived from (or in many languages identical to) their positive-form counterparts (like English tall). This fact stands in tension with prevailing formal semantic treatments of gradable adjectives as degree relations that require extra semantic machinery not only for comparative predication but also for positive predication; for the latter, scholars typically posit a null morpheme or type-shift pos. In this short article, we review morphophonological evidence showing that in Arabic, comparative-form adjectives (like aTwal ‘taller’) are of equal complexity with their positive-form counterparts (like Tawiil ‘tall’), both derived from a common tri-consonantal root (in this case Twl‾‾‾‾√), rather than one word being derived from the other. This raises the tantalizing possibility of Arabic becoming the first documented case of a language overtly realizing pos, with adjectives like Tawiil consisting of a degree-relation-denoting root and a pos-denoting template. We nonetheless conclude (albeit tentatively) that such an analysis is probably wrong, given (a) the idiosyncrasy in the phonological shape that the putative pos-denoting template takes across different adjectives, (b) the appearance of the same templatic shapes in non-adjectives, and (c) the appearance of adjectives like Tawiil in non-pos environments. We thereby uphold the generalization that no language realizes pos overtly. We close with a brief look at nominalized forms of gradable adjectives in Arabic and offer some preliminary remarks on the broader prospects of semantic de-composition for gradable adjectives, engaging with recent work on cross-linguistic variation in the grammar of property concepts.

  25. Dan

    Nevins and Parrott (2010). Variable rules meet Impoverishment theory: Patterns of agreement leveling in English varieties. Lingua 120(5): 1135-1159.

  26. Mary Robinson

    Kastner & Zu (2017) Blocking and paradigm gaps. Morphology: 1-42

    https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11525-017-9309-8

  27. Mary Robinson

    Morphologically assigned accent and an initial three syllable window in Ese’eja
    Nicholas Rolle and Marine Vuillermet

    http://ling.auf.net/lingbuzz/003280

  28. Yining Nie

    Kathleen Currie Hall et al (2016) Measuring perceived morphological relatedness. Canadian Journal of Linguistics 61: 31-76.

  29. Itamar

    Watanabe (2015). Valuation as deletion: inverse in Jemez and Kiowa.
    http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11049-014-9272-6

  30. Yining

    Mark Donohue (2015) Morphological opacity: Rules of referral in Kanum verbs. In Baerman, Brown & Corbett (eds.), Understanding and measuring morphological complexity.

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