In:Variations on Polysynthesis: The Eskaleut languages
Edited by Marc-Antoine Mahieu and Nicole Tersis
[Typological Studies in Language 86] 2009
► pp. 19–34
Polysynthesis as a typological feature
An attempt at a characterization from Eskimo and Athabaskan perspectives
Published online: 8 April 2009
https://doi.org/10.1075/tsl.86.02pol
https://doi.org/10.1075/tsl.86.02pol
Polysynthesis is characterized as a type of morphology, qualitatively different from inflectional morphology and from derivational morphology and redefined as productive noninflectional concatenation (PNC). Like syntax and unlike derivational morphology, PNC is fully productive, potentially recursive, necessarily concatenative, allows for ordering variability of some elements, and interacts with syntax. Unlike inflectional morphology and like syntax and derivational morphology, PNC can be category-changing. This postulated morphological feature is very prevalent in polysynthetic language families such as Eskimo (illustrated by Siberian Yupik), but not very prevalent in other language families often designated as polysynthetic, such as Athabascan (illustrated by Western Apache). This new characterization of polysynthesis has as an interesting consequence its existence, to a small degree, in Indo-European languages.
Keywords: Athabascan, Eskimo, morphological typology, polysynthesis, Siberian Yupik, Western Apache
Cited by (14)
Cited by 14 other publications
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2018. Measuring polysynthesis. In Recent developments in Functional Discourse Grammar [Studies in Language Companion Series, 205], ► pp. 233 ff.
Beck, David
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Chelliah, Shobhana L. & Willem J. de Reuse
[no author supplied]
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