In:Current Issues in Morphological Theory: (Ir)regularity, analogy and frequency
Edited by Ferenc Kiefer †, Mária Ladányi and Péter Siptár
[Current Issues in Linguistic Theory 322] 2012
► pp. v–vi
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Published online: 30 May 2012
https://doi.org/10.1075/cilt.322.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/cilt.322.toc
Table of contents
Foreword & acknowledgments
Editors’ introduction
Part I. Regularity, irregularity, and analogy
Arguments from Lovari loan-verb adaptation for an analogy-based analysis of verbal systems
Possible and impossible variation in Hungarian
Variation in the possessive allomorphy of Hungarian
Revisiting exocentricity in compounding: Evidence from Greek and Cypriot
A constructionist account of the Modern Dutch adnominal genitive
Part II. The role of frequency in morphological complexity, morphological change and language acquisition
Perspectives on morphological complexity
Morphological complexity and unsupervised learning: Validating Russian inflectional classes using high frequency data
A working typology of multiple exponence
Linguistic self-regulation: The case of Greek grammatical gender change in progress
Suffix predictability and stem transparency in the acquisition of German noun plurals
Acquisition of German diminutive formation and compounding in a comparative perspective: Evidence for typology and the role of frequency
Index
