
Measuring Productivity in Word Formation
The Case of Israeli Hebrew
Shmuel Bolozky(Author)
Brill (Publisher)
Published on 21. January 1999
Book
Hardback
XIII, 253 pages
978-90-04-11252-0 (ISBN)
Article exhausted; check different version
Description
Morphological productivity is the likelihood of a morphological pattern being used or comprehended in new word formation. Three methods of measuring productivity of word formation are proposed productivity tests (open-ended and judgment tasks), dictionary comparison (newer with older dictionaries, supplements with earlier versions), and the ratio of hapax legomena to tokens in corpora. Processes which score highly by all three criteria can safely be regarded as productive. The model is examined in light of data from Israeli Hebrew, which as a Semitic language offers a rich array of discontinuous and linear derivation patterns.
The Hebrew data also support the claims that in essence, lexical formation is semantically based; that it is constrained by a requirement for distinctiveness; and that it may vary significantly with the type of derivation base.
The Hebrew data also support the claims that in essence, lexical formation is semantically based; that it is constrained by a requirement for distinctiveness; and that it may vary significantly with the type of derivation base.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Leiden
Netherlands
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
Cloth
Dimensions
Height: 244 mm
Width: 171 mm
Thickness: 22 mm
Weight
617 gr
ISBN-13
978-90-04-11252-0 (9789004112520)
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Shmuel Bolozky, Ph.D. (1972) in Linguistics, University of Illinois, is Professor of Hebrew and Judaic Studies at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. He has published extensively on Israeli Hebrew phonology and morphology and their application to the teaching of Hebrew.