In:Polylogues on The Mental Lexicon: An exploration of fundamental issues and directions
Edited by Gary Libben †, Gonia Jarema and Victor Kuperman
[Not in series 238] 2021
► pp. 109–142
Chapter 5Hebrew adjective lexicons in developmental perspective
Subjective register and morphology
Published online: 13 October 2021
https://doi.org/10.1075/z.238.05rav
https://doi.org/10.1075/z.238.05rav
Article outline
- Thesis
- Commentaries on Ravid et al. thesis
- Ray Jackendoff commentary on Ravid et al. thesis
- James Myers commentary on Ravid et al. thesis
- Russell Richie commentary on Ravid et al. thesis
- Benjamin Tucker commentary on Ravid et al. thesis
- Chris Westbury commentary on Ravid et al. thesis
- The article
- Adjectives
- The morphology of Hebrew adjectives
- Non-linear adjective morphology
- Nominal patterns
- Linear adjective morphology
- Reduplication
- Adjectives in complex structures
- The morphology of Hebrew adjectives
- Morphology as a developmental criterion
- Familiarity as index
- Hebrew adjectives in texts
- Register
- Method
- Step 1: Compiling the adjective list
- Morphological structures
- Step 2: Eliciting register judgments from language experts
- Participants and procedure
- Data analysis
- ICC analyses
- Latent class analyses
- Step 1: Compiling the adjective list
- Results
- Quantitative analyses
- The Five adjective lexicons: Semantic and morphological analyses
- The Core adjective lexicon: Lowest register (M = 1.44)
- The Basic adjective lexicon: Neutral register (M = 2.49)
- The Mature adjective lexicon: Elevated register (M = 3.12)
- The Educated adjective lexicon: High register (M = 3.71)
- The Super-Literate adjective lexicon: Very high register (M = 4.51)
- Discussion
- Semantics
- Morphology
- Register as proxy for frequency
- Adjectives
Notes References
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