The goal of the course is to provide a survey of the field of morphology, including the empirical and
typological domains that it covers, the various models that have been advocated, as well as how
morphology interacts with other modules of grammar, primarily syntax, phonology and the lexicon.
Emphasis is placed on introducing students to recent research and current debates on fundamental
issues such as the nature of the minimal sign, morphological structure and the nature of paradigms.
Grading is based on a written test at the end of the term.
Poslední úprava: Mudrová Andrea, Bc. et Bc. (13.01.2020)
The goal of the course is to provide a survey of the field of morphology, including the empirical and
typological domains that it covers, the various models that have been advocated, as well as how
morphology interacts with other modules of grammar, primarily syntax, phonology and the lexicon.
Emphasis is placed on introducing students to recent research and current debates on fundamental
issues such as the nature of the minimal sign, morphological structure and the nature of paradigms.
Grading is based on a written test at the end of the term.
Poslední úprava: Mudrová Andrea, Bc. et Bc. (13.01.2020)
Deskriptory -
Topics covered: • The basics: what evidence is there that words have inner structure? • The notion of word: lexeme, grammatical word, phonological word, lexical item • The types of morphological operations: affixation, fusion, reduplication, truncation, compounding, conversion, cliticisation, suppletion, templatic morphology • The functions of inflection: agreement, case assignment, the marking of valency, of grammaticalised categories, of arbitrary classes • Derivation and related issues: lexicalisation, blocking, analysability and productivity • Root-, stem- and word-based morphology; the nature of paradigms • Categories, structures and forms in morphological expression: markedness, levels of analysis • Morphological typology and the classical models: item and arrangement, item and process • Morphemic vs. lexemic models: arguments for and against word and paradigm models • The interaction between morphology and phonology: junctures, lexical phonology • Types of morphological change: reanalysis, morphologisation, change of class, analogical change, change in the system of categories
Poslední úprava: Mudrová Andrea, Bc. et Bc. (13.01.2020)
Topics covered: • The basics: what evidence is there that words have inner structure? • The notion of word: lexeme, grammatical word, phonological word, lexical item • The types of morphological operations: affixation, fusion, reduplication, truncation, compounding, conversion, cliticisation, suppletion, templatic morphology • The functions of inflection: agreement, case assignment, the marking of valency, of grammaticalised categories, of arbitrary classes • Derivation and related issues: lexicalisation, blocking, analysability and productivity • Root-, stem- and word-based morphology; the nature of paradigms • Categories, structures and forms in morphological expression: markedness, levels of analysis • Morphological typology and the classical models: item and arrangement, item and process • Morphemic vs. lexemic models: arguments for and against word and paradigm models • The interaction between morphology and phonology: junctures, lexical phonology • Types of morphological change: reanalysis, morphologisation, change of class, analogical change, change in the system of categories
Poslední úprava: Mudrová Andrea, Bc. et Bc. (13.01.2020)
Literatura -
Recommended readings:
Aikhenvald, Alexandra (2005) Evidentiality. Oxford: OUP
Anderson, Stephen R. (1992) A-morphous morphology. Cambridge: CUP
Anttila, Arto (1997), Deriving variation from grammar. In Hiskens, Frans L. et al. (eds), Variation, Change and Phonological Theory. Amsterdam – Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 35–68
Aronoff, Mark (1994) Morphology by Itself. Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press
Audring, J., F. Masini (eds, 2017) The Oxford Handbook of Morphological Theory. Oxford: OUP
Babby, Leonard H. (1987) Case, Prequantifiers, and Discontinuous Agreement in Russian. Natural Language and Linguistic Theory 5(1): 91–138
Bauer, Laurie (20032) Introducing Linguistic Morphology. Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh.
Bauer, Laurie (2004) Morphological Productivity. Cambridge: CUP
Blevins, James P. (2016) Word and Paradigm Morphology. Oxford: OUP
Campbell, Lyle (2004) Historical Linguistics: An intruduction. Edinburgh: EUP
Chomsky, Noam, Morris Halle (1968). The sound pattern of English. New York: Harper and Row
Clackson, James (2007) Indo-European Linguistics. An Introduction. Cambridge: CUP
Dixon, Robert M. W (1994) Ergativity. Cambridge: CUP
Goldsmith, John (1990) Autosegmental and metrical phonology. Oxford–Cambridge, MA: Blackwell
Hockett, Charles F (1987) Refurbishing our Foundations: Elementary Linguistics from an Advanced Point of View. Amsterdam: John Benjamins
Klaiman, Miriam H. (1991) Grammatical Voice. Cambridge: CUP
de Lacy, Paul (2006), Markedness: Reduction and Preservation in Phonology. Cambridge: CUP
Lüdtke, Helmut (ed., 1980) Kommunikationstheoretische Grundlagen des Sprachwandels. Berlin–New York: Walter de Gruyter
Matthews, Peter H. (1974) Morphology: An Introduction to the Theory of Word Structure. Cambridge: CUP
Nevins, Andrew (2011) Phonologically conditioned allomorph selection. In: Van Oostendorp, Marc et al. (eds), The Blackwell Companion to Phonology. Malden, MA/Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell 2357–2382.
Spencer, Andrew (1991) Morphological theory: an introduction to word structure in generative grammar. Oxford: Blackwell
Poslední úprava: Mudrová Andrea, Bc. et Bc. (13.01.2020)
Recommended readings:
Aikhenvald, Alexandra (2005) Evidentiality. Oxford: OUP
Anderson, Stephen R. (1992) A-morphous morphology. Cambridge: CUP
Anttila, Arto (1997), Deriving variation from grammar. In Hiskens, Frans L. et al. (eds), Variation, Change and Phonological Theory. Amsterdam – Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 35–68
Aronoff, Mark (1994) Morphology by Itself. Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press
Audring, J., F. Masini (eds, 2017) The Oxford Handbook of Morphological Theory. Oxford: OUP
Babby, Leonard H. (1987) Case, Prequantifiers, and Discontinuous Agreement in Russian. Natural Language and Linguistic Theory 5(1): 91–138
Bauer, Laurie (20032) Introducing Linguistic Morphology. Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh.
Bauer, Laurie (2004) Morphological Productivity. Cambridge: CUP
Blevins, James P. (2016) Word and Paradigm Morphology. Oxford: OUP
Campbell, Lyle (2004) Historical Linguistics: An intruduction. Edinburgh: EUP
Chomsky, Noam, Morris Halle (1968). The sound pattern of English. New York: Harper and Row
Clackson, James (2007) Indo-European Linguistics. An Introduction. Cambridge: CUP
Dixon, Robert M. W (1994) Ergativity. Cambridge: CUP
Goldsmith, John (1990) Autosegmental and metrical phonology. Oxford–Cambridge, MA: Blackwell
Hockett, Charles F (1987) Refurbishing our Foundations: Elementary Linguistics from an Advanced Point of View. Amsterdam: John Benjamins
Klaiman, Miriam H. (1991) Grammatical Voice. Cambridge: CUP
de Lacy, Paul (2006), Markedness: Reduction and Preservation in Phonology. Cambridge: CUP
Lüdtke, Helmut (ed., 1980) Kommunikationstheoretische Grundlagen des Sprachwandels. Berlin–New York: Walter de Gruyter
Matthews, Peter H. (1974) Morphology: An Introduction to the Theory of Word Structure. Cambridge: CUP
Nevins, Andrew (2011) Phonologically conditioned allomorph selection. In: Van Oostendorp, Marc et al. (eds), The Blackwell Companion to Phonology. Malden, MA/Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell 2357–2382.
Spencer, Andrew (1991) Morphological theory: an introduction to word structure in generative grammar. Oxford: Blackwell
Poslední úprava: Mudrová Andrea, Bc. et Bc. (13.01.2020)