Article published In: The Mental Lexicon
Vol. 2:2 (2007) ► pp.129–181
The dislike of regular plurals in compounds
Phonological familiarity or morphological constraint?
Published online: 16 October 2007
https://doi.org/10.1075/ml.2.2.03ber
https://doi.org/10.1075/ml.2.2.03ber
English speakers disfavor compounds containing regular plurals compared to irregular ones. Haskell, MacDonald and Seidenberg (2003) attribute this phenomenon to the rarity of compounds containing words with the phonological properties of regular plurals. Five experiments test this proposal. Experiment 1 demonstrated that novel regular plurals (e.g., loonks-eater) are disliked in compounds compared to irregular plurals with illicit (hence less frequent) phonological patterns (e.g., leevk-eater, plural of loovk). Experiments 2–3 found that people show no dispreference for compounds containing nouns that merely sound like regular plurals (e.g., hose-installer vs. pipe-installer). Experiments 4–5 showed a robust effect of morphological regularity when phonological familiarity was controlled: Compounds containing regular plural nonwords (e.g., gleeks-hunter, plural of gleek) were disfavored relative to irregular, phonologically-identical, plurals (e.g., breex-container, plural of broox). The dispreference for regular plurals inside compounds thus hinges on the morphological distinction between irregular and regular forms and it is irreducible to phonological familiarity.
Keywords: phonology, compound, morphology, inflection
Cited by (25)
Cited by 25 other publications
Xu, Lily, Elizabeth Solá-Llonch, Huilei Wang & Megha Sundara
2023. A meta-analytic review of morphological priming in Semitic languages. The Mental Lexicon 18:2 ► pp. 300 ff.
Nieder, Jessica, Ruben van de Vijver & Holger Mitterer
Janda, Richard D.
Senzaki, Sawa, Jennifer Lanter & Yuki Shimizu
Al-Dobaian, Abdullah S.
Jessen, Anna, João Veríssimo & Harald Clahsen
2018. Variability and consistency in late bilinguals’ morphology. The Mental Lexicon 13:2 ► pp. 186 ff.
Fries, Marie-Hélène
Kilbourn-Ceron, Oriana, Heather Newell, Máire B. Noonan & Lisa deMena Travis
2016. Phase domains at PF. In Morphological Metatheory [Linguistik Aktuell/Linguistics Today, 229], ► pp. 121 ff.
VERÍSSIMO, JOÃO
이생근
Budd, Mary-Jane, Silke Paulmann, Christopher Barry & Harald Clahsen
Clahsen, Harald, Sabrina Gerth, Vera Heyer & Esther Schott
2015. Morphology constrains native and non-native word formation in different ways
. The Mental Lexicon 10:1 ► pp. 53 ff.
Hanssen, Esther, Arjen Versloot, Eric Hoekstra, Arina Banga, Anneke Neijt & Robert Schreuder
2015. Morphological variation in the speech of Frisian-Dutch bilinguals. Linguistic Approaches to Bilingualism 5:3 ► pp. 356 ff.
Stemberger, Joseph P.
2015. Phonological reduction in the first part of noun compounds. In Phonological and Phonetic Considerations of Lexical Processing [Benjamins Current Topics, 80], ► pp. 67 ff.
Jaensch, Carol, Vera Heyer, Peter Gordon & Harald Clahsen
Seidenberg, Mark S. & David C. Plaut
Banga, Arina, Esther Hanssen, Anneke Neijt & Robert Schreuder
Berent, Iris, Amanda Dupuis, Diane Brentari & Steven Pinker
Clahsen, Harald, Loay Balkhair, John-Sebastian Schutter & Ian Cunnings
Hanssen, Esther, Arina Banga, Robert Schreuder & Anneke Neijt
Silva, Renita, Sabrina Gerth & Harald Clahsen
Stemberger, Joseph Paul
2013. Phonological reduction in the first part of noun compounds. The Mental Lexicon 8:3 ► pp. 320 ff.
Berent, Iris, Colin Wilson, Gary F. Marcus & Douglas K. Bemis
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 27 november 2025. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.
