The Oxford Handbook of Derivational Morphology is intended as a companion volume to the Oxford Handbook of Compounding (OUP 2009), aiming to provide a comprehensive and thorough overview of the study of derivational morphology. Written by distinguished scholars, its 41 chapters are devoted to theoretical and definitional matters, formal and semantic issues, interdisciplinary connections, and detailed descriptions of derivational processes in a wide range of language families. It presents the reader with the current state of the art in the study of derivational morphology.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- Part I
- 1: Rochelle Lieber and Pavol ¿tekauer: Introduction: The scope of the handbooks
- 2: Pius ten Hacken: Delineating derivation and inflection
- 3: Susan Olsen: Delineating derivation and compounding
- 4: Rochelle Lieber: Theoretical approaches to derivation
- 5: Mark Aronoff and Mark Lindsay: Productivity, blocking, and lexicalization
- 6: Rochelle Lieber: Methodological issues in studying derivation
- 7: Harald Baayen: Experimental and psycholinguistic approaches
- 8: Laurie Bauer: Concatenative derivation
- 9: Juliette Blevins: Infixation
- 10: Salvador Valera: Conversion
- 11: Sharon Inkelas: Non-concatenative derivation: Reduplication
- 12: Stuart Davis and Natsuko Tsujimura: Non-concatenative derivation: Other processes
- 13: Mary Paster: Allomorphy
- 14: Artemis Alexiadou: Nominal derivation
- 15: Andrew Koontz-Garboden: Verbal derivation
- 16: Antonio Fábregas: Adjectival and adverbial derivation
- 17: Livia Körtvélyessy: Evaluative derivation
- 18: Gregory Stump: Derivation and function words
- 19: Franz Rainer: Homophony versus polysemy in derivation
- 20: Pavol ¿tekauer: Derivational paradigms
- 21: Pauliina Saarinen and Jennifer Hay: Affix ordering in derivation
- 22: Carola Trips: Derivation and historical change
- 23: Livia Körtvélyessy and Pavol ¿tekauer: Derivation in a social context
- 24: Eve Clark: Acquisition of derivational morphology
- Part II
- 25: Sailaja Pingali: Indo-European
- 26: Ferenc Kiefer and Johanna Laakso: Uralic
- 27: Irina Nikolaeva: Altaic
- 28: Edward J. Vajda: Yeniseian
- 29: Mark J. Alves: Mon-Khmer
- 30: Robert Blust: Austronesian
- 31: Denis Creissels: Niger-Congo
- 32: Erin Shay: Afro-Asiatic
- 33: Gerrit Dimmendaal: Nilo-Saharan
- 34: Karen Steffen Chung, Nathan W. Hill, and Jackson T.-S. Sun: Sino-Tibetan
- 35: Jane Simpson: Pama-Nyungan
- 36: Keren Rice: Athabaskan
- 37: Alana Johns: Eskimo-Aleut
- 38: Gabriela Caballero: Uto-Aztecan
- 39: Verónica Nercesian: Matacoan
- 40: Bernd Heine: Areal tendencies in derivation
- 41: Rochelle Lieber and Pavol ¿tekauer: Universals in derivation