bookOxford University Press eBooksFeb 22, 2007Closed access

Distributed Morphology and the Syntax—Morphology Interface

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Abstract

A theory of the syntax/morphology interface is first, a theory of how ‘words’ and their internal structure – the traditional domain of morphology – relate to the structures generated by the syntax, and second, a theory of how the rules for deriving complex words relate to the rules for deriving syntactic structures. A prominent line of research in this area consists of approaches assuming some version of the Lexicalist Hypothesis. For present purposes, this is the claim that (at least some) words are special in ways that e.g. phrases are not, and that this ‘specialness’ calls for an architecture in which the derivation of words and the derivation of syntactic objects occur in different modules of the grammar…

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722
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Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Morphology (biology)
  • Syntax
  • Interface (matter)
  • Computer science
  • Artificial intelligence
  • Zoology
  • Biology
  • Operating system
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