304 Pages
    by Routledge

    304 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book aims to provide a thorough and wide-ranging introduction to approaches to morphology in linguistic theory over the last twenty years. This comprehensive survey concentrates not only on the generative linguistic mainstream, but on approaches that are less fashionable or relatively unknown to English-speaking linguists, and highlights recent European, particularly German-speaking research.

    Part I INTRODUCTION 1 Aims and scope 2 Morphology and the lexicon Part II THE CHOMSKYAN IMPETUS IN MORPHOLOGICAL RESEARCH 3 Morphology and phonology 4 Morphology and syntax Part III OTHER IMPETUSES IN MORPHOLOGICAL RESEARCH 5 Typological and diachronic issues 6 Meaning-based approaches to morphology 7 Morphosyntactic properties and their realisation 8 Natural Morphology and related approaches Part IV CONCLUSIONS 9 What morphology can contribute to general linguistic theory

    Biography

    Andrew Carstairs-McCarthy teaches linguistics at the University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand. He is the author of Allomorphy in Inflexion and is a regular contributor to linguistic journals.

    'It's a superb summary and guide to the literature, as well as being elegantly and clearly argued: the chapter on typology is as good as I can imagine a chapter being.' - Roger Lass, University of Capetown, South Africa