In:Trubetzkoy's Orphan: Proceedings of the Montréal Roundtable on “Morphonology: contemporary responses” (Montréal, October 1994)
Edited by Rajendra Singh
[Current Issues in Linguistic Theory 144] 1996
► pp. v–vi
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Published online: 7 November 1996
https://doi.org/10.1075/cilt.144.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/cilt.144.toc
Table of contents
Acknowledgementsvii
List of Contributorsxiii
Editor's Foreword
De l'autonomie de la morphophonologie: Discours d'ouverture
I. Allomorphy and Morphophonology
Allomorphy or Morphophonology?
Where Does Allomorphy Begin? Comments on Kiparsky
On the Morphology/Phonology Boundary: Comments on Kiparsky
Reply to Mohanan and Walker
Discussion
II. Modularity, Morphonology, and Gradience
A Functionalist Semiotic Model of Morphonology
Form & Content in a Functionalist Semiotic Model of Morphonology: Comments on Dressler
On A Functionalist Semiotic Model of Morphonology: Comments on Dressler
Reply to Janda and Walker
Discussion
III. Linguistics without Morphophonology
Quelques avantages d'une linguistique débarrassée de la morpho(pho)nologie
Where Does Morphophonology Belong? Comments on Ford & Singh
“Même après le débrouillement il peut rester de la brume”: Comments on Ford & Singh
Reply to Mohanan and Janda
Discussion
IV. Morphoprosody
Morphoprosody: Some reflections on accent and morphology
Another View of Prosody and Morphology: Comments on Hurch
Reply to Piggott
Discussion
V. Productivity and the Lexicon
Productivity, Regularity and Fusion: How language use affects the lexicon
Productivity, Derivational Morphology, and Atypical Populations: Comments on Bybee
A Reply to Goad
Discussion
VI. Some Additional Contributions
Issues in Morphophonology: A view from the floor
On Morphophonology: A view from the outside
References
Index
