Matter and Mind in Morphology: Syntactic and Lexical Deverbal Morphology in Dutch |
Contents
Two types of morphological processes | 1 |
A language system consisting of two domains connected by | 2 |
Conclusion | 6 |
Copyright | |
11 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
action adjectival adjectives adverbials affixes Agent analysis argued argument structure aspect aspectual distinctions assume assumption baker base verb Booij central processing unit deadjectival denote derivational processes derivations with sel direct object discussed distinctive properties domain Dutch e)lijk e)ling element example express external arguments fact Fodor formations forms fully productive grammar homogeneous categories infinitival nominalisations inflectional input verb instance Instruments internal interpretation intransitive Language Input System lexical account lexical and syntactic lexical categories lexical derivations lexical morphological processes lexical morphology lexical processes lexicon linguistic listed mass-nouns meaning modify morphemes notions nouns participles perfect aspect phenomena possible predictable prototype categories psych verbs refer respect restrictions result S-structure Scalise sentence Small Clause speakers staan stative subcategorization subcategorization frames suffix syntactic account syntactic morphological processes syntactic morphology syntactic processes syntax tense thematic roles Theme transitive verbs unaccusative verbs unergative unergative verbs unproductive words zijn