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Provides a critical introduction to the central ideas and perennial problems of morphology, fully revised and updated in a new edition
What is Morphology? is a concise, student-friendly introduction to the fundamentals of contemporary morphological theory and practice. Requiring only a basic knowledge of linguistics, this popular textbook describes morphological phenomena and their interactions with phonology, syntax, and semantics while familiarizing students with the importance of linguistic morphology as a subject of research. Each chapter contains engaging examples and student-friendly explanations to support the development of the skills necessary to analyze a wealth of classic morphological problems.
The third edition is fully updated to reflect the current state of the field, featuring a new chapter on morphology's intersections with typology and computational linguistics. Expanded coverage of morphological productivity and processing is supported by additional exercises, examples, and further reading suggestions. Thoroughly revised chapters cover essential topics including morphemes, the lexicon, phonology, inflection, syncretism, and derived lexemes. This accessible textbook:
The latest edition of What is Morphology? remains the ideal textbook for undergraduate and graduate linguistics students, researchers and scholars unfamiliar with linguistic morphology, and professionals involved in industrial applications of linguistics such as speech recognition, natural language understanding, machine translation, text-to-speech, and natural language generation.
Mark Aronoff is Distinguished Professor of Linguistics at Stony Brook University, USA. He is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and previously served as Editor of Language, the Journal of the Linguistic Society of America and as President of the Linguistic Society of America. For Wiley Blackwell he co-edited The Handbook of Linguistics, now in its second edition, with Janie Rees-Miller.
Kirsten Fudeman is former Professor of French at University of Pittsburgh, USA, where she taught medieval French language and literature. She is the author of Vernacular Voices: Language and Identity in Medieval French Jewish Communities.
Preface viii
Acknowledgments xiii
Abbreviations xiv
Remarks on Transcription xvii
The International Phonetic Alphabet xix
About the Companion Website xx
1 Thinking about Morphology and Morphological Analysis 1
1.1 What is Morphology? 1
1.2 Morphemes 2
1.3 Morphology in Action 4
1.4 Background and Beliefs 9
1.5 Introduction to Morphological Analysis 11
1.6 Summary 20
Introduction to Kujamaat Jóola 22
2 Words and Lexemes 32
2.1 What is a Word? 33
2.2 Empirical Tests for Wordhood 36
2.3 Types of Words 38
2.4 Inflection vs. Derivation 45
2.5 Two Approaches to Morphology: Item-and-Arrangement, Item-and-Process 47
2.6 The Lexicon 52
2.7 Summary 54
Kujamaat Jóola Noun Classes 55
3 Morphology and Phonology 69
3.1 Allomorphs 70
3.2 Prosodic Morphology 74
3.3 Primary and Secondary Affixes 77
3.4 Linguistic Exaptation, Leveling, and Analogy 81
3.5 Morphophonology and Secret Languages 87
3.6 Summary 89
Kujamaat Jóola Morphophonology 91
4 Derivation and the Lexicon 103
4.1 The Saussurean Sign 103
4.2 Motivation and Compositionality 104
4.3 Derivation and Structure 116
4.4 Lexicalization 122
4.5 Summary 125
Derivation in Kujamaat Jóola 126
5 Derivation and Semantics 131
5.1 The Polysemy Problem 132
5.2 The Semantics of Derived Lexemes 134
5.3 Summary 141
Derivation and Verbs in Kujamaat Jóola 142
6 Inflection 150
6.1 What is Inflection? 152
6.2 Inflection vs. Derivation 160
6.3 Inventory of Inflectional Morphology Types 163
6.4 Syncretism 170
6.5 Typology 171
6.6 Summary 173
Agreement in Kujamaat Jóola 174
7 Morphology and Syntax 187
7.1 Morphological vs. Syntactic Inflection 188
7.2 Structural Constraints on Morphological Inflection 189
7.3 Inflection and Universal Grammar 191
7.4 Grammatical Function Change 193
7.5 Summary 200
Kujamaat Jóola Verb Morphology 201
8 Morphological Productivity and the Mental Lexicon 217
8.1 What is Morphological Productivity? 218
8.2 Productivity and Structure: Negative Prefixes in English 220
8.3 Degrees of Productivity 221
8.4 Salience and Productivity 226
8.5 Testing Productivity 228
8.6 The Mental Lexicon, Psycholinguistics, and Neurolinguistics 235
8.7 Conclusion 240
9 Computational Morphology 246
9.1 Introduction 247
9.2 Early Work 247
9.3 Problem Specification 249
9.4 Knowledge-based Methods 252
9.5 Data-Driven Methods 260
9.6 Hybrid Models 266
9.7 Resources for Computational Morphology 267
Acknowledgments 268
Further Reading 269
Exercises 270
Glossary 274
References 289
Index 299
This little book is meant to introduce fundamental aspects of morphology to students with only a minimal background in linguistics. It presupposes only the very basic knowledge of phonetics, phonology, syntax, and semantics that an introductory course in linguistics provides. If, having worked through this book, a student has some understanding of the range of basic issues in morphological description and analysis; can appreciate what a good morphological description looks like, how a good morphological analysis works and what a good theory of morphology does; can actually do morphological analysis at an intermediate level; and most importantly understands that linguistic morphology can be rewarding; then the basic goal of the book will have been met. In this edition, we have included a new chapter on computational morphology written by Kyle Gorman. This chapter is more technical than the other chapters of the book due to the subject matter and may therefore require closer reading and a slower, more guided approach on the part of the instructor. But we believe that the growing importance of experimental and computational methods in morphology make the required effort well worth it, and we are grateful to Kyle for his contribution.
The book departs from a trend common among current linguistics textbooks, even at the elementary level, which tend to be quite theoretical in orientation and even devoted to a single theory or set of related theories. We have chosen instead to concentrate on description, analysis, and the fundamental issues that face all theories of morphology. At the most basic level, we want to provide students with a grasp of how linguists think about and analyze the internal structure of complex words in a representative range of real languages. What are the fundamental problems, regardless of one's theoretical perspective? We therefore dwell for the most part on questions that have occupied morphologists since the beginnings of modern linguistics in the late nineteenth century, rather than on more detailed technical points of particular theories.
Of course, this means that we assume that there are general questions, but in morphology, at least, the early modern masters were grappling with many of the same questions that occupy us to this day. Descriptions and analyses that Baudouin de Courtenay wrote in the 1880s are not merely understandable, but even interesting and enlightening to the modern morphologist. The same is true of the work of Edward Sapir and Roman Jakobson from the 1920s and 1930s. Yes, the terminology and theories are different, but the overall goals are much the same. That is not to say that no progress has been made, only that the basic issues about word-internal structure have remained stable for quite a long time.
One fundamental assumption that goes back to the beginnings of modern linguistics is that each language is a system where everything holds together ("la langue forme un système où tout se tient et a un plan d'une merveilleuse rigueur": Antoine Meillet). More recent linguists have stressed the importance of universal properties that all languages have in common over properties of individual languages, but not even the most radical universalists will deny the systematicity of individual human languages. It is therefore important, from the very beginning, that a student be presented, not just with fragmentary bits of data from many languages, as tends to happen with both morphology and phonology, but with something approaching the entire morphological system of a single language. To that end, we have divided chapters 1 through 7 into two parts. The first part is the conventional sort of material that one would find in any textbook. Here our focus is often on standard American English, although we present data from many other languages, as well. The second part describes in some detail part of the morphology of Kujamaat Jóola, a language spoken in Senegal. For each chapter, we have tried to select an aspect of Kujamaat Jóola morphology that is close to the topic of the chapter. By the end of the book, the student should have a reasonable grasp of the entire system of Kujamaat Jóola morphology and thus understand how, at least for one language, the whole of the morphology holds together. Of course, no one language can be representative of all the world's languages, and morphology is so varied that not even the most experienced analyst is ever completely prepared for what a new language may bring. But students certainly will benefit from a reasonably complete picture of how a single language works.
The Kujamaat Jóola material complements the material in the main portion of the chapter, but it is not meant to mirror it exactly. Our inclusion of particular Kujamaat Jóola topics was dictated in part by the data that were available to us. Our primary sources were J. David Sapir's A Grammar of Diola-Fogny, his 1967 revisions to the analysis of the Kujamaat Jóola verb (Thomas and Sapir 1967), and his unpublished dictionary. In a number of cases, we have used the Kujamaat Jóola section of each chapter to delve into topics not treated in the main portion, or treated only superficially. Thus chapters 2 and 7 contain detailed examinations of Kujamaat Jóola noun classes and verb morphology, respectively, and in chapter 3 we address its rich interactions between vowel harmony and morphology.
We chose Kujamaat Jóola for this book because its morphology, though complex and sometimes unusual, is highly regular, which makes it an excellent teaching vehicle. Some might question this choice, preferring a language with a higher degree of morphological fusion. Such a language might have led to theoretical issues, for example, that we do not explore in any detail here. However, we felt that in a book of this type, aimed at the beginning or intermediate-level morphologist, Kujamaat Jóola was an ideal choice.
One value of presenting beginning students with the largely complete morphological description of a single language is that descriptive grammars (which more often than not concentrate on morphology and phonology) form a mainstay of linguistic research, not only at more advanced levels of study but also throughout a researcher's career. The ability to work through a descriptive grammar is not innate, as many of us assume, but an acquired skill that takes practice. The Kujamaat Jóola sections taken together comprise an almost complete descriptive morphology of that language, so that by the end of the book students will have had the experience of working through an elementary morphological description of one language and will be somewhat prepared to tackle more complete descriptions when the time comes.
This brings us to the topic of how we intend the Kujamaat Jóola sections of this book to be used. Because of their inherent complexity, it is crucial that the instructor not simply assign these sections as readings. Instead, each must be gone over carefully in class until the students have a good grasp of the material in it. Otherwise, students are not likely to extract full value from the Kujamaat Jóola sections. Although we feel that these sections will be useful and rewarding, the main portions of the chapter are freestanding, and some instructors may prefer to skip some or all of the Kujamaat Jóola sections.
Each chapter closes with a set of problems that are cross-referenced with the text, and we expect that the solutions to these problems will be discussed in detail in class. Some simpler exercises are integrated into the text itself, with answers provided. We feel that some exercises, particularly open-ended questions, are especially well suited to class discussion, and so instructors may decide not to assign them in written form. Most chapters also contain Kujamaat Jóola exercises designed to get students to apply the data we have provided creatively and analytically. Chapter 1 contains two sample problem sets with answers (section 1.5.3). We suggest that instructors assign these separately from the rest of the chapter reading and that they ask students to write them out as they would a regular assignment, without reading the explanation and analysis that go with them. Then students can check their work on their own. This should prepare them for doing some of the other analytical problems in the text.
Other features of this book include suggestions for further reading at the end of each chapter and a glossary. The terms in the glossary appear in bold the first time they are used or explained in the text. Some of the suggestions for further reading are classic treatments of morphological problems, and others were chosen because of the clear way in which they illustrate phenomena raised in the chapter. Instructors might want to assign some of the readings as homework; or students may want to consult them as they work on morphological problems on their own. Another extremely useful reference work for students is Bauer's A Glossary of Morphology (2004).
Ideally, each class session will be divided into three parts, corresponding to the division of the chapters: exposition of new pedagogical material; detailed discussion of Kujamaat Jóola; and discussion of solutions for the homework problems of the day (we assume that problems will be assigned daily and that students' performance on them will comprise a good part of the basis of their grades in the course).
We close with a warning to both the instructor and the student: this book does not pretend to cover all of morphology, but rather only a number of general topics drawn from the breadth of...
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