The Texture of the Lexicon
Relational Morphology and the Parallel Architecture
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP Oxford
- Date of Publication 24 December 2019
- ISBN 9780198827900
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages336 pages
- Size 254x179x25 mm
- Weight 762 g
- Language English 23
Categories
Short description:
This volume offers a major reconceptualization of linguistic theory through the lens of morphology, crucially collapsing the distinction between the lexicon and the grammar. This approach accounts for both productive and non-productive morphological phenomena, and moreover integrates linguistic theory into psycholinguistics and human cognition.
MoreLong description:
In this volume, Ray Jackendoff and Jenny Audring embark on a major reconceptualization of linguistic theory as seen through the lens of morphology. Their approach, Relational Morphology, extends the Parallel Architecture developed by Jackendoff in Foundations of Language (2002), Simpler Syntax (2005), and Meaning and the Lexicon (2010). The framework integrates morphology into the overall architecture of language, enabling it to interact insightfully with phonology, syntax, semantics, and above all, the lexicon.
The first part of the book situates morphology in the language faculty, and introduces a novel formalism that unifies the treatment of all morphological patterns, inflectional or derivational, systematic or marginal. Central to the theory is the lexicon, which both incorporates the rules of grammar and explicitly encodes relationships among words and among grammatical patterns. Part II puts the theory to the test, applying it to a wide range of familiar and less familiar morphological phenomena. Part III connects Relational Morphology with issues of language processing and language acquisition, and shows how its formal tools can be extended to a variety of linguistic and nonlinguistic phenomena outside morphology. The value of Relational Morphology thus lies not only in the fact that it can account for a range of morphological phenomena, but also in how it integrates linguistic theory, psycholinguistics, and human cognition.
The Texture of the Lexicon is a reader-friendly introduction to the framework of Relational Morphology that complements the Parallel Architecture approach. I believe that readers interested in morphology at large will find something interesting in this read.
Table of Contents:
Part I: The Theory
Situating morphology
The functions of schemas
Motivation in the lexicon
Part II: Using and refining the tools
Formalizing morphological phenomena
Formalizing inflection
Morphologically conditioned phonological alternations
Part III: Beyond morphological theory
Language processing and language acquisition through the lens of Relational Morphology
Applying the tools to other domains
Coda: What have we done?
References
Index of words and schemas
Index of authors and subjects
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