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1

Xu, Xue-Bin. Morphological changes in rice panicle development. Manila: International Rice Research Institute, 1986.

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2

Environmental Monitoring Information Network for Water Resources Project. and Center for Environmental and Geographic Information Services (Bangladesh), eds. Prediction for bank erosion and morphological changes of the Jamuna river, 2007. Dhaka: Centre for Environmental and Geographic Information Services, 2007.

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3

Center for Environmental and Geographic Information Services (Bangladesh), Environmental Monitoring Information Network for Water Resources Project., and Jamuna-Meghna River Erosion Mitigation Project., eds. Prediction for bank erosion and morphological changes of the Jamuna and Padma rivers, 2005. Dhaka: Centre for Environmental and Geographic Information Services, 2005.

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4

Hesselink, Annika W. History makes a river: Morphological changes and human interference in the river Rhine, The Netherlands. Utrecht: Koninklijk Nederlands Aardrijkskundig Genootschap, 2002.

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5

Hesselink, Annika W. History makes a river: Morphological changes and human interference in the river Rhine, The Netherlands. Utrecht: Koninklijk Nederlands Aardrijkskundig Genootschap/Faculteit Ruimtelijke Wetenschappen, Universiteit Utrecht, 2001.

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6

McTeague, Jennifer Ann. Morphological changes in the first thoracis ganglion following limb loss and regeneration in the snapping shrimp, Alpheus heterochelis. Ottawa: National Library of Canada, 1992.

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7

Center for Environmental and Geographic Information Services (Bangladesh), ed. Prediction of river bank erosion and morphological changes along the Jamuna, the Ganges, and the Padma rivers in 2013. Dhaka: Center for Environmental and Geographic Information Services, 2013.

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8

On, Y. C. Image analysis of the morphological response of streptomyces coelicolor A3(2) temperature sensitive mutants exposed to changes in growth environment. Manchester: UMIST, 1994.

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9

1945-, Lightfoot David, ed. Syntactic effects of morphological change. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002.

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10

Woodard, Roger D. On interpreting morphological change: The Greek reflexive pronoun. Amsterdam: J.C. Gieben, 1990.

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11

A, Martin Robert, and Barnosky Anthony D, eds. Morphological change in Quaternary mammals of North America. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005.

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12

A, Martin Robert, and Barnosky Anthony D, eds. Morphological change in Quaternary mammals of North America. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993.

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13

Morphological and syntactic change in medieval Greek and South Slavic languages. Muenchen: LINCOM Europa, 2001.

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14

Wijnberg, K. M. Morphologic behaviour of a barred coast over a period of decades. Utrecht: Koninklijk Nederlands Aardrijkskundig Genootschap, 1995.

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15

Morphological change up close: Two and a half centuries of verbal inflection in Nuremberg. Tübingen: M. Niemeyer, 2000.

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16

Annable, W. K. Database of morphologic characteristics of watercourses in Southern Ontario. Meadowvale, Ont: Credit Valley Conservation Authority, 1996.

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17

Brant, Dawn Patricia. The signalling pathways involved in thrombin-induced morphological change and DNA synthesis in human neuroepithelial cells. Birmingham: University of Birmingham, 1997.

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18

Mant, Jenny. Vegetation in the ephemeral channels of southeast Spain: Its impact on and response to morphological change. Portsmouth: University of Portsmouth, Dept. of Geography, 2002.

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19

Gacek, Richard R. Morphologic changes in superior vestibulo-ocular neurons and vestibular nerve following labyrinthectom in the cat. Stockholm: Scandinavian University Press, 1994.

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20

Annable, W. K. Morphologic relationships of rural watercourses in Southern Ontario and selected field methods in fluvial geomorphology. Meadowvale, Ont: Credit Valley Conservation Authority, 1996.

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21

Lesser, Giles. Approach to Medium-Term Coastal Morphological Modelling. Taylor & Francis Group, 2009.

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22

Khurgel, Moshe. Morphological changes in astrocytes in kindling: Relevance to epileptogenesis. 1996.

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23

Lesser, Giles. Approach to Medium-Term Coastal Morphological Modelling: UNESCO-IHE PhD Thesis. Taylor & Francis Group, 2017.

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24

Wyatt, Laura A., and Michael Doherty. Morphological aspects of pathology. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199668847.003.0003.

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Osteoarthritis (OA) is the commonest condition to affect synovial joints, but although any synovial joint can be affected, most studies of pathology relate to large joints (knees and hips). OA involves the whole joint and pathological alterations typically occur in all joint tissues. Established OA is characterized by a mixture of tissue loss and new tissue production resulting in focal loss of articular hyaline cartilage together with bone remodelling and osteophyte formation. Articular cartilage may show increased thickness in the earliest stages of OA with increased numbers of hypertrophic chondrocytes, followed by progressive decline in matrix components, thickness, and chondrocyte number. Surface fibrillation and vertical clefts become evident in mid- to end-stage OA and eventual complete loss of cartilage can occur, predominantly in maximum load-bearing regions, with subsequent eburnation and furrowing of bone. Bone remodelling may lead to alteration of bone shape and variable trabecular thickness in subchondral bone, whilst subchondral microfractures may result in localized osteonecrosis, fibrosis, and ‘cysts’. Endochondral ossification of new fibrocartilage produced predominantly at the joint margin produces characteristic bony osteophytes. The synovium shows areas of hyperplasia with varying amounts of lymphocyte aggregates and inclusion of osteochondral ‘loose’ bodies, and the outer fibrous capsule thickens to help stabilize the compromised joint. Synovial fluid increases in volume but decreases in viscosity. Periarticular changes include type II muscle atrophy and enthesophytes.
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25

Semple, John Laurie. Microvascular inflammatory changes in skin following thermal injury: quantitation, kinetics and morphological considerations. 1987.

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26

Zaiki, Farah Wahida Ahmad, and Sulaiman Dom. Effects of Prenatal Diagnostic Ultrasound Exposure on Rabbit Fetus: Physical and Morphological Changes. Independently Published, 2016.

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27

Walsh, Bruce, and Michael Lynch. Changes in Quantitative Traits Over Time. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198830870.003.0001.

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Quantitative traits—be they morphological or physiological characters, aspects of behavior, or genome-level features such as the amount of RNA or protein expression for a specific gene—usually show considerable variation within and among populations. This chapter provides a historical overview of the study of such traits and their connections with traditional and molecular population genetics, applied breeding, and evolutionary theory.
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28

Jamuna-Meghna River Erosion Mitigation Project. and Center for Environmental and Geographic Information Services (Bangladesh), eds. Prediction for bank erosion and morphological changes of the Ganges and the Padma Rivers, 2007. Dhaka: Centre for Environmental and Geographic Information Services, 2007.

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29

Sherman, Mark E., Melissa A. Troester, Katherine A. Hoadley, and William F. Anderson. Morphological and Molecular Classification of Human Cancer. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190238667.003.0003.

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Accurate and reproducible classification of tumors is essential for clinical management, cancer surveillance, and studies of pathogenesis and etiology. Tumor classification has historically been based on the primary anatomic site or organ in which the tumor occurs and on its morphologic and histologic phenotype. While pathologic criteria are useful in predicting the average behavior of a group of tumors, histopathology alone cannot accurately predict the prognosis and treatment response of individual cancers. Traditional measures such as tumor stage and grade do not take into account molecular events that influence tumor aggressiveness or changes in the tumor composition during treatment. This chapter provides a primer on approaches that use pathology and molecular biology to classify and subclassify cancers. It describes the features of carcinomas, sarcomas, and malignant neoplasms of the immune system and blood, as well as various high-throughput genomic platforms that characterize the molecular profile of tumors.
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30

Maiden, Martin, Adina Dragomirescu, Gabriela Pană Dindelegan, Oana Uţă, and Rodica Zafiu. The Oxford History of Romanian Morphology. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198829485.001.0001.

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Romanian is one of the most morphologically complex Romance languages. This book is the first ever comprehensive and accessible account of how that morphological system evolved. Here are some of the most salient morphological traits distinctive of this language: it possesses an inflexional case system; unlike other Romance languages, it has an inflexional vocative; the morphological marking of number reached such a level of unpredictability that, for most nouns (and for many adjectives), the form of the plural must be independently specified alongside that of the singular; in addition to masculine and feminine, it seems to possess a third gender, often referred to as a ‘neuter’; its verb system contains a non-finite form, which apparently continues the Latin supine; the infinitive has undergone a morphological split such that one form functions now purely as a noun, while the other remains purely a verb; the distinctive morphology of the subjunctive has largely disappeared; lastly, noun and verb morphology are deeply permeated by the effects of successive sound changes, which have created remarkably complex patterns of allomorphy. The origins of many of these developments are problematic, indeed controversial. Moreover, they are problematic in ways that are of interest not only to broader historical Romance linguistics but, even more broadly, to morphological theory tout court. The Oxford History of Romanian Morphology shows how the features listed here are relevant to students and scholars interested in historical morphology generally no less than they are to Romance linguists.
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31

Ringe, Don. The development of Proto-Germanic. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198792581.003.0003.

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This chapter discusses the reconstructable linguistic changes that occurred in the development from Proto-Indo-European to Proto-Germanic. The first half of the chapter discusses regular sound changes, especially prominent changes including the elimination of laryngeals, Grimm’s Law, Verner’s Law, the remodelling of Sievers’ Law, the loss of intervocalic *j, and several changes of vowels. The second half discusses morphological changes. A long initial section deals with the wholesale morphological restructuring of the verb system, concentrating on preterite-present verbs, strong and weak past tense stems, and participles. Subsequent sections discuss less sweeping changes in the inflection of verbs and nominals.
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32

Maiden, Martin. The Romance Verb. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199660216.001.0001.

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This book is the first ever comprehensive comparative–historical survey of patterns of alternation in the Romance verb that appear to be autonomously morphological in the sense that, although they can be shown to be persistent through time, they have long ceased to be conditioned by any phonological or functional determinant. Some of these patterns are well known in Romance linguistics, while others have scarcely been noticed. The sheer range of phenomena that participate in them far surpasses what Romance linguists had previously realized. The patterns constitute a kind of abstract leitmotif, which runs through the history of the Romance languages and confers on them a distinctive morphological phsyiognomy. Although intended primarily as a novel contribution to comparative–historical Romance linguistics, the book considers in detail the status of patterns that appear to be, in the terminology of Mark Aronoff, ‘morphomic’: a matter of ‘morphology by itself’, unsupported by determining factors external to the morphological system. Particular attention is paid to the problem of their persistence, self-replication, and reinforcement over time. Why do abstract morphological patterns that quite literally do not make sense display such diachronic robustness? The evidence suggests that speakers, faced with different ways of expressing semantically identical material, seek out distributional templates into which those differences can be deployed. In Romance, the only available templates happen to be morphomic, morphologically accidental effects of old sound changes or defunct functional conditionings. Those patterns are accordingly exploited and reinforced by being made maximally predictable.
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33

Kihm, Alain. Old French declension. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198712329.003.0003.

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Old French noun inflection emerged and disappeared early in the history of the French language. A number or reasons are examined including the nature of sound changes occurring between Late Latin and Old French. Paradigm structure is another reason. The declensional paradigms of masculine nouns produced a mismatch between morphological and semantic defaults for the number and case features. This was because the non-default values of these features came to be expressed by a morphologically default, uninflected word-form, thus resulting in a system that was both weird in terms of the morphology-semantics interface and probably hard to acquire and to process. Repairing the mismatch entailed giving up declension in favour of a simple number contrast where the semantic non-defaultness of plurality matches the inflectedness of the plural form. Default considerations thus played the role of analogy in the Neogrammarian scenario of language change, restoring order where sound change had created chaos.
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34

Fertig, David. Analogy and Morphological Change. Edinburgh University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9780748646234.

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35

Fertig, David L. Analogy and Morphological Change. Edinburgh University Press, 2013.

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36

Analogy and Morphological Change. Oxford University Press, Incorporated, 2013.

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37

Analogy and Morphological Change. Edinburgh University Press, 2013.

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38

Analogy and Morphological Change. Edinburgh University Press, 2013.

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39

Fertig, David. Analogy and Morphological Change. Edinburgh University Press, 2013.

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40

Analogy and Morphological Change. Oxford University Press, Incorporated, 2013.

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41

Maiden, Martin. New morphomic patterns from old. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199660216.003.0010.

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This chapter considers ways in which morphomic patterns can themselves change, yet without ceasing to be morphomic. Overall, the trend does not appear to be towards paradigmatic distributions that make sense. Rather morphomic patterns may change, giving rise to new morphomic patterns because of overlap with other morphomic patterns, accidental effects of sound change (particularly ones that produce syncretisms), or independent morphological changes. The data suggest that the predictability of distribution is superordinate to making sense in extramorphological terms.
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42

Norris, Richard 1830-1916. Physiology and Pathology of the Blood: Comprising the Origins, Mode of Development, Pathological and Post-Mortem Changes of Its Morphological Elements in Mammalian and Oviparous Vertebrates. Creative Media Partners, LLC, 2021.

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43

Kikusawa, Ritsuko. Ergativity and Language Change in Austronesian Languages. Edited by Jessica Coon, Diane Massam, and Lisa Demena Travis. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198739371.013.23.

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The focus of this chapter is change that takes place in the case-alignment patterns found in pronominal systems in Austronesian languages. Three sets of changes that resulted in a shift from an ergative to a different alignment system are described, namely, a case from an ergative to an inverse system that was probably triggered by a word order change; one from an ergative to an accusative system as a result of a merger of two pronominal sets; and an ergative to accusative change as a result of change in the distribution of morphological forms. For each, the mechanisms by which the changes took place and their preconditions are described. Since the methodology for morphosyntactic comparison and reconstruction is not yet well established, how the changes described here relate to the general principles of comparative (historical) linguistics is also explained.
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44

Vakhtin, Nikolai, and Ekaterina Gruzdeva. Language Obsolescence in Polysynthetic Languages. Edited by Michael Fortescue, Marianne Mithun, and Nicholas Evans. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199683208.013.24.

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This chapter describes what happens at the structural level to polysynthetic languages during language obsolescence, attrition, and loss. The changes that take place in decaying polysynthetic languages should be distinguished from (a) those occurring in all obsolescent languages regardless of their type, and (b) changes in “healthy” polysynthetic languages. It is shown that the consequences of polysynthetic language decay are primarily manifested in the collapse of morphological complexity, involving the loss of morphological ‘slots’, the reduction in the number of bound morphemes and their substitution by free ones, the ‘fossilization’ of markers and their reanalysis, the deprivation of word formation productivity, the destruction of noun incorporation, and reduction of allomorphy.
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45

Lightfoot, David W., ed. Syntactic Effects of Morphological Change. Oxford University Press, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199250691.001.0001.

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46

Zimmermann, Eva. Introduction. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198747321.003.0001.

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The phenomenon of Morphological Length-Manipulation is introduced and defined and it is discussed why an investigation of this phenomenon is challenging and interesting for both morphological and phonological theory. For example, the existence of subtractive MLM—instances where the shortening or deletion of segments marks a morpheme—is the most obvious challenge that MLM poses for any theory of morphology that wants to maintain the theorem that morphology is additive. The chapter defines the empirical scope of this book and discusses why, for example, reduplication is disregarded for most parts and only morphological changes that add or subtract segmental length or segments are taken into account. The variety of attested MLM patterns is then illustrated with a range of examples.
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47

Burton, Derek, and Margaret Burton. Fish diversity. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198785552.003.0001.

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Fish diversity is considered in terms of variety of their morphological, taxonomic, habitat and population attributes. Fish, with over 30, 000 current species, represent the largest group of vertebrates. The complexity of classification of a group of this size and antiquity, together with recognition of additional species, demands continuous ongoing revision. The impact of the recent fundamental changes in fish classification in 2016 is discussed. Life in water involves adaptations to widely different habitats which can result in physiological morphological and life-style variations which are reviewed.
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48

Martin, Robert A., and Anthony D. Barnosky, eds. Morphological Change in Quaternary Mammals of North America. Cambridge University Press, 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cbo9780511565052.

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49

(Editor), Robert A. Martin, and Anthony D. Barnosky (Editor), eds. Morphological Change in Quaternary Mammals of North America. Cambridge University Press, 2005.

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50

Barnosky, Anthony D., and Robert A. Martin. Morphological Change in Quaternary Mammals of North America. Cambridge University Press, 2009.

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