
Defective Paradigms
Missing Forms and What They Tell Us
Oxford University Press
Published on 20. May 2010
Book
Hardback
230 pages
978-0-19-726460-7 (ISBN)
Description
An important design feature of language is the use of productive patterns in inflection. In English, we have pairs such as 'enjoy' ~ 'enjoyed', 'agree' ~ 'agreed', and many others. On the basis of this productive pattern, if we meet a new verb 'transduce' we know that there will be the form 'transduced'. Even if the pattern is not fully regular, there will be a form available, as in 'understand' ~ 'understood'. Surprisingly, this principle is sometimes violated, a phenomenon known as defectiveness, which means there is a gap in a word's set of forms: for example, given the verb 'forego', many if not most people are unwilling to produce a past tense.
Although such gaps have been known to us since the days of Classical grammarians, they remain poorly understood. Defectiveness contradicts basic assumptions about the way inflectional rules operate, because it seems to require that speakers know that for certain words, not only should one not employ the expected rule, one should not employ any rule at all. This is a serious problem, since it is probably safe to say that all reigning models of grammar were designed as if defectiveness did not exist, and would lose a considerable amount of their elegance if it were properly factored in.
This volume addressed these issues from a number of analytical approaches - historical, statistical and theoretical - and by using studies from a range of languages.
Although such gaps have been known to us since the days of Classical grammarians, they remain poorly understood. Defectiveness contradicts basic assumptions about the way inflectional rules operate, because it seems to require that speakers know that for certain words, not only should one not employ the expected rule, one should not employ any rule at all. This is a serious problem, since it is probably safe to say that all reigning models of grammar were designed as if defectiveness did not exist, and would lose a considerable amount of their elegance if it were properly factored in.
This volume addressed these issues from a number of analytical approaches - historical, statistical and theoretical - and by using studies from a range of languages.
Reviews / Votes
The descriptive content of this volume alone will be of great interest to morphologists. * Linguist List *More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Target group
College/higher education
Dimensions
Height: 241 mm
Width: 164 mm
Thickness: 21 mm
Weight
542 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-726460-7 (9780197264607)
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Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Editor
Research Fellow, Surrey Morphology Group, University of Surrey
Distinguished Professor of Linguistics and Russian Language,Distinguished Professor of Linguistics and Russian Language, University of Surrey; Fellow of the British Academy
Senior Lecturer in Linguistcis, University of Surrey
Content
Introduction: Defectiveness: typology and diachrony
Failing one's obligations: defectiveness in Rumantsch reflexes of DEBERE
Defectiveness as stem suppletion in French and Spanish verbs
Defective paradigms of reflexive nouns and participles in Latvian
Relative acceptability of missing adjective forms in Swedish
Defective verbal paradigms in Hungarian: description and experimental study
On morphomic defectiveness: evidence from the Romance languages of the Iberian Peninsula
The search for regularity in irregularity: defectiveness and its implications for our knowledge of words
Ineffability through modularity: gaps in the French clitic cluster
Interactions between defectiveness and syncretism
Failing one's obligations: defectiveness in Rumantsch reflexes of DEBERE
Defectiveness as stem suppletion in French and Spanish verbs
Defective paradigms of reflexive nouns and participles in Latvian
Relative acceptability of missing adjective forms in Swedish
Defective verbal paradigms in Hungarian: description and experimental study
On morphomic defectiveness: evidence from the Romance languages of the Iberian Peninsula
The search for regularity in irregularity: defectiveness and its implications for our knowledge of words
Ineffability through modularity: gaps in the French clitic cluster
Interactions between defectiveness and syncretism