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Morphological complexity / Matthew Baerman, Dunstan Brown, Greville G. Corbett Linguistics

By: Baerman, MatthewContributor(s): Brown, Dunstan | Corbett, Greville GMaterial type: TextTextSeries: Publisher: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2017Description: xix, 188p. ill:, index, TablesISBN: 9781316343074 (ebook); 9781107543614; 9781107543614Subject(s): Grammar, Comparative and general | Grammar, Comparative and general | Complexity (Linguistics)DDC classification: P241. B34 2023, 415/.9 Online resources: Click here to access online | Click here to access online Summary: Inflectional morphology plays a paradoxical role in language. On the one hand it tells us useful things, for example that a noun is plural or a verb is in the past tense. On the other hand many languages get along perfectly well without it, so the baroquely ornamented forms we sometimes find come across as a gratuitous over-elaboration. This is especially apparent where the morphological structures operate at cross purposes to the general systems of meaning and function that govern a language, yielding inflection classes and arbitrarily configured paradigms. This is what we call morphological complexity. Manipulating the forms of words requires learning a whole new system of structures and relationships. This book confronts the typological challenge of characterising the wildly diverse sorts of morphological complexity we find in the languages of the world, offering both a unified descriptive framework and quantitative measures that can be applied to such heterogeneous systems
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Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Books Books Gabriel Afolabi Ojo Central Library (Headquarters).
P241 .B34 2023 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 0195161
Books Books Gabriel Afolabi Ojo Central Library (Headquarters).
P241 .B34 2023 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 0195162

Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 17 Jul 2017)

Inflectional morphology plays a paradoxical role in language. On the one hand it tells us useful things, for example that a noun is plural or a verb is in the past tense. On the other hand many languages get along perfectly well without it, so the baroquely ornamented forms we sometimes find come across as a gratuitous over-elaboration. This is especially apparent where the morphological structures operate at cross purposes to the general systems of meaning and function that govern a language, yielding inflection classes and arbitrarily configured paradigms. This is what we call morphological complexity. Manipulating the forms of words requires learning a whole new system of structures and relationships. This book confronts the typological challenge of characterising the wildly diverse sorts of morphological complexity we find in the languages of the world, offering both a unified descriptive framework and quantitative measures that can be applied to such heterogeneous systems

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