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1

Vrettakos, Kōstas. Athōs, Hageioreitika chrōmata kai morphes. Tria Phylla, 1989.

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2

Jirka, Hana, ed. A resource-light approach to morpho-syntactic tagging. Rodopi, 2010.

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3

Melloni, Chiara. Event and result nominals: A morpho-semantic approach. Peter Lang, 2012.

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4

Heyna, Franziska. Étude morpho-syntaxique des parasynthétiques: Les dérivés en dé- et en anti-. Duculot, 2012.

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5

Panagos, Thodōros. Tou Alexandrou hē chōra: Morphes kai choroi tēs Makedonias mesa apo kartes tēs periodou, 1914-1918. Ekdoseis "Nea Synora"-A.A. Livanē, 1992.

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6

Parker, Philip M., and James N. Parker. Morphine: A medical dictionary, bibliography, and annotated research guide to internet references. ICON Health Publications, 2004.

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7

Vom Wort zum Suffix: Das Morphem (zeug) als Wortbildungsglied in den bairisch-österreichischen Mundarten. H. Buske, 1986.

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8

Uri mal ŭi hyŏngtʻae wa ŭimi: The morph and meaning of Korean. Kyŏngjin, 2009.

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9

Uri mal ŭi hyŏngtʻae wa ŭimi: The morph and meaning of Korean. Kyŏngjin, 2009.

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10

Second-generation speech: Lexicon, code-switching and morpho-syntax of Croatian-English bilinguals. Peter Lang, 2003.

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11

Form of God, form of a servant: An examination of the Greek noun [morphē] in Philippians 2:6-7. University Press of America, 2010.

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12

O'Neill, Eugene. Long day's journey into night. Royal National Theatre/Nick Hern Books, 1991.

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13

Eugene, O'Neill. Long day's journey into night. Yale University Press, 1989.

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14

Takēs, Koudouna, ed. Morphou: Genethlia gē : mnēmes. Politistikos Homilos Morphou, 2002.

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15

Dorais, Louis-Jacques. The Lexicon in Polysynthetic Languages. Edited by Michael Fortescue, Marianne Mithun, and Nicholas Evans. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199683208.013.9.

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This chapter shows Eastern Canadian Arctic Inuktitut words are formed and used in the context of polysynthesis. It starts with a very basic classification of word-types along distributional lines: how various categories of morphemes combine or don’t combine with the same or other categories, in order to generate various types of words. On the basis of a number of examples, it will be shown that the lexicalization of morphemic groupings lies at the core of the Inuktitut lexicon. In contemporary language usage, this process of lexicalization may be either covert or overt. When covert, the combined meaning conveyed by the addition of each original morpheme in a word is mostly imperceptible to modern speakers, the only semantic function of the lexicalized word being to signify its new denotatum. When overt, however, it can serve as a powerful tool for creating new words apt at describing a world in constant change.
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16

Morphine and the Relief of Cancer Pain. 2nd ed. Beaconsfield Publishers, 1999.

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17

Keresztes, Kalma. Morphemic and Semantic Analysis of the Word Families (Uralic and Altaic Series). RoutledgeCurzon, 1997.

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18

Maiden, Martin. The Latin third stem and its survival in Romance. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199660216.003.0007.

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The implications of Aronoff’s classic example of a morphome—the Latin third stem—for the history of the Romance languages are considered; the third stem is shown to persist in Romance in the form of the past participle (also, in Romanian, in the supine) and to display truly ‘morphomic’ properties in diachrony. Some criticisms of the morphomic status of the third stem in Latin are reviewed. The significance of apparent counterexamples in Portuguese and elsewhere is considered. The diachronic data disclose a probably crucial distinction between derivational and inflexional domains in the definition of morphomic patterns. Such patterns reveal themselves as robust only within inflexional morphology, and it is suggested that perfect lexical identity between alternating word forms is crucial to the existence and persistence of morphomic patterns.
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19

Miller, Paul. Many Ways to Reading Success. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190880545.003.0009.

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On average deaf readers end up being poor readers. Their reading weakness has been claimed to reflect primary deficits in their ability to access and process the phonology of written words, but evidence from research with deaf Hebrew readers and deaf readers of other language backgrounds suggests that the role of phonology in explaining their poor reading comprehension has been overstated. To corroborate this conclusion, the author presents evidence from three sources. The first demonstrates the ability of a deaf youngster to acquire a language through reading and writing. The second presents evidence of deaf preschoolers’ ability to acquire effective word reading skills without phonological mediation. The third shows how deaf readers’ underdeveloped morpho-syntactic understanding improves when they are exposed to an interactive computerized learning environment that visually demonstrates how language rules operate. A paradigm shift in how reading skills should be developed in prelingually deaf individuals is discussed.
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20

Thomas, Mondémé, ed. Nos visages-flash ultimes. Al Dante, 2007.

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21

Trost, Harald. Morphology. Edited by Ruslan Mitkov. Oxford University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199276349.013.0002.

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This article discusses in detail computational morphology with examples from various languages. It deals with the processing of words in both their graphemic, i.e. written, and their phonemic, i.e. spoken form. It has a wide range of practical applications such as spelling correction or automated hyphenation. It further seeks the fact that these tasks may seem simple to a human but they pose hard problems to a computer program. This article provides insights into why this is so and what techniques are available to tackle these tasks. It discusses the sort of information that is expressed by morphology and differs widely between languages and looks at the constraints involved in morphotactics. It is responsible for governing the rules for the combination of morphs into larger entities. It concludes with an outline of finite-state morphology and alternative formalisms.
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22

Slusser, George. Benford’s Short Fiction. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252038228.003.0009.

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This chapter focuses on Gregory Benford's short fiction. The short story is widely considered the essential form for science fiction (SF). Indeed, many of the most esteemed SF novels began as an idea-packed short story, which the author subsequently elaborates (often with less success) into a larger narrative. Since his first published story “Stand In” appeared in 1965 in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, Benford has published a large number of short stories in magazines and in anthologies. He collected many of his best stories in two landmark volumes, In Alien Flesh (1986) and Matter's End, followed by three more recent anthologies: Worlds Vast and Various (1999), Immersion and Other Short Novels (2002), and Anomalies: Collected Stories (2012). This chapter examines two of Benford's short stories, “Exposures” (1981) and “Mozart on Morphine” (1989).
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23

Foreman, Judy. The Global Pain Crisis. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/wentk/9780190259242.001.0001.

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Hundreds of millions around the world live in chronic pain - many in such severe pain they are disabled by it. The Institute of Medicine estimates that chronic pain costs the U.S. alone $560 to $635 billion a year in direct medical costs and lost productivity. Morphine, an effective painkiller, costs only three cents a dose, yet because of excessive regulation in many countries, it is unavailable to millions of people who need it, even at the end of life. The World Health Organization notes that in addition to the one million end-stage AIDS/HIV patients who can’t get morphine and other controlled medications, 5.5 million terminal cancer patients, nearly a million people suffering from accidents or violence, and an incalculable number of people living with chronic illnesses and recovering from surgery can’t get it, either. Women, children, older people, and the poor are disproportionally affected by inadequate pain relief. Physicians know almost nothing about chronic pain, much less how to treat it, for two reasons: medical schools barely teach it and government institutions allot almost nothing to the pain research budget. In The Global Pain Crisis: What Everyone Needs to Know®, renowned health journalist Judy Foreman addresses the most important questions about chronic pain: what is it, who does it affect most, what works and what doesn’t for pain relief in Western and alternative medicines, what are the risks and benefits for opioids and marijuana, and how can the chronic pain crisis be resolved for good? Foreman’s book is a wake-up call for a health problem that affects all people across the globe, at all stages of life. Written in the classic, easy-to-read and quick reference style of the What Everyone Needs to Know® series, The Global Pain Crisis is a must for anyone whose life or work is affected by chronic pain.
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24

Coon, Jessica, Diane Massam, and Lisa Demena Travis, eds. The Oxford Handbook of Ergativity. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198739371.001.0001.

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As any quick survey of the syntactic literature will show, there are almost as many different views of ergativity as there are so-called ergative languages (languages whose basic clause structure instantiates an ergative case-marking or agreement pattern). While ergativity is sometimes referred to as a typological characteristic of languages, research on the phenomenon has made it more and more clear that (a) languages do not fall clearly into one or the other of the ergative/absolutive vs. nominative/accusative categories and (b) ergative characteristics are not consistent from language to language. This volume contributes to both the theoretical and descriptive literature on ergativity and adds results from experimental investigations of ergativity. The chapters cover overview approaches within generative, typological, and functional paradigms, as well as approaches to the core morpho-syntactic building blocks of an ergative construction (absolutive case and licensing, and ergative case and licensing); common related constructions (anti-passive); common related properties (split-ergativity, syntactic vs. morphological ergativity, word order, the interaction of agreement patterns and ergativity); and extensions and permutations of ergativity (nominalizations, voice systems). While the editors all work within the generative framework and investigate the syntactic properties of ergativity through fieldwork, and many of the chapters represent similar research, there are also chapters representing different frameworks (functional, typological) and different approaches (experimental, diachronic). The theoretical chapters touch on many different languages representing a wide range of language families, and there are sixteen case studies that are more descriptive in nature, attesting to both the pervasiveness and diversity of ergative patterns.
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