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1

Andrews, Edna. The semantics of suffixation. München: LINCOM Europa, 1996.

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2

Pharies, David A. Bibliography of Latin and Ibero-Romance suffixation. Madison: Hispanic Seminary of Medieval Studies, 1994.

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3

Lagerberg, Robert. Stress and suffixation in modern Russian: The development of uniform syllable stress. Nottingham: Astra, 1999.

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4

Wójcicki, Adam. Constraints on suffixation: A study in generative morphology of English and Polish. Tübingen: Max Niemeyer Verlag, 1995.

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5

A study of samāsasvara and samasānta suffixation in the Aṣṭādhyāyī of Pānịnī. Delhi: Bharatiya Kala Prakashan, 2008.

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6

Debaty-Luca, Thierry. Théorie fonctionnelle de la suffixation: Appliquée principalement au français et au wallon du Centre. Paris: Les Belles Lettres, 1986.

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7

Muehleisen, Susanne. Heterogeneity in word-formation patterns: A corpus-based analysis of suffixation with -ee and its productivity in English. Amsterdam, The Netherlands: John Benjamins Pub. Co., 2010.

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8

Muehleisen, Susanne. Heterogeneity in word-formation patterns: A corpus-based analysis of suffixation with -ee and its productivity in English. Amsterdam, The Netherlands: John Benjamins Pub. Co., 2010.

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9

Heterogeneity in word-formation patterns: A corpus-based analysis of suffixation with -ee and its productivity in English. Philadelphia, Pa: John Benjamins Pub. Company, 2010.

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10

Dubois, Laurent. La suffixation des anthroponymes grecs antiques (SAGA): Actes du colloque international de Lyon, 17-19 septembre 2015, Université Jean-Moulin-Lyon 3. Genève: Droz, 2017.

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11

Pullela, Śrīrāmacandruḍu, and Rāṣṭrīyasaṃskr̥tavidyāpīṭhaṃ Tirupati, eds. Saṃskr̥tavacovicchittiḥ pratyayārthavaicitrī ca =: Sanskrit idioms, phrases, and suffixational subtleties. Tirupatiḥ: Rāṣṭriyasaṃskr̥tavidyāpīṭham, 2002.

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12

Argument Structure in Kashmiri: Form and Function of Pronominal Suffixation. BRILL, 2017.

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13

Wójcicki, Adam. Constraints on Suffixation: A Study in Generative Morphology of English and Polish. de Gruyter GmbH, Walter, 2015.

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14

Woodbury, Anthony. Central Alaskan Yupik (Eskimo-Aleut). Edited by Michael Fortescue, Marianne Mithun, and Nicholas Evans. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199683208.013.30.

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This is a sketch of polysynthesis in Central Alaskan Yupik (CAY) based on the Cup’ik dialect of Chevak, Alaska. CAY has well-defined words whose content is often holophrastic and whose parts are often word-like. Holophrasis is achieved by a combination of rich inflectional suffixation and by a derivational morphology in which several hundred productive suffixes bearing different lexical and grammatical meanings and functions may be added, recursively, to a lexical base. Each suffix selects the category of its base, over which it normally has scope, and determines the category of the resultant base. This simple but prolific suffixation-based system, termed ‘morphological orthodoxy’, yields long, polysynthetic words. Three cases are then discussed where suffixal elements govern constructions that in one way or another stretch CAY’s orthodox morphology, motivating them by showing parallel constructions governed by elements with similar grammatical and semantic content in languages with more heterodox morphology and syntax.
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15

Panagiotidis, Phoevos, Vassilios Spyropoulos, and Anthi Revithiadou. Little v as a categorizing verbal head: evidence from Greek. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198767886.003.0002.

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This chapter proposes that Greek exhibits systematic verbalizing morphology so that the vast majority of Greek verbs contain the morphophonological exponence of v in their stem, either as an overt formative via derivational suffixation (first conjugation) or as an empty vocalic element ̃V (second conjugation). Thus, Greek provides a case for a robust morphophonological manifestation of a verbalizing v head as a simple categorizer, which combines with a category-specific or an a-categorial root to derive a verb and, crucially, is not related to transitivity, agentivity, or to argument/event structure. Finally, the chapter shows that the verbalizing exponent itself does not encode Aktionsart, causativity, transitivity, Voice, or Aspect and that the choice of the allomorph expressing the v head lexically depends on the root.
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16

Dworkin, Steven N. The medieval Hispano-Romance lexicon. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199687312.003.0005.

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This chapter examines the lexicon of Old Spanish. It first surveys the dictionaries and other lexical resources available to the student of the medieval language, before going on to describe briefly the various historical lexical strata and issues of lexical stability. It next offers a rich series of examples of nouns, adjectives, verbs, and function words found in Old Spanish that did not survive into the modern language. The chapter next gives examples of Old Spanish lexical doublets and of lexical items that have undergone major semantic changes over time. The remainder of the chapter is devoted to the creation in Old Spanish of neologisms through such processes of derivational morphology as suffixation, prefixation, and compounding. Emphasis falls here on words that did not survive into the modern language.
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17

Nakayama, Toshihide. Polysynthesis in Nuuchahnulth, a Wakashan Language. Edited by Michael Fortescue, Marianne Mithun, and Nicholas Evans. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199683208.013.35.

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Nuuchahnulth is a Southern Wakashan language spoken in British Columbia, Canada. It is a verb-initial head-marking language and is almost exclusively suffixing morphologically. The language exhibits polysynthesis involving holophrasis but does not allow compounding. Instead, it has numerous suffixes with heavy lexical content, traditionally termed ‘lexical suffixes’. This lexical suffixation serves as the central mechanism in Nuuchahnulth for bringing multiple lexically heavy morphemes into a word. The complexity of actual polysynthetic words in this language seems rather limited compared to what is reported to be possible in Eskimo languages. There are cases where similar semantic content can be expressed either synthetically using a polysynthetic word or analytically as separate words. When such an alternation is possible, discourse-pragmatic considerations, particularly discourse referentiality of the object of the predicate, play a major role in the choice of constructions.
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18

Dworkin, Steven N. A Guide to Old Spanish. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199687312.001.0001.

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This book describes the linguistic structures that constitute Medieval or Old Spanish as preserved in texts written prior to the beginning of the sixteenth century. It emphasizes those structures that contrast with the modern standard language. Chapter 1 presents methodological issues raised by the study of a language preserved only in written sources. Chapter 2 examines questions involved in reconstructing the sound system of Old Spanish before discussing relevant phonetic and phonological details. The chapter ends with an overview of Old Spanish spelling practices. Chapter 3 presents in some detail the nominal, verbal, and pronominal morphology of the language, with attention to regional variants. Chapter 4 describes selected syntactic structures, with emphasis on the noun phrase, verb phrase, object pronoun placement, subject-verb-object word order, verb tense, aspect, and mood. Chapter 5 begins with an extensive list of Old Spanish nouns, adjectives, verbs, and function words that have not survived into the modern standard language. It then presents examples of coexisting variants (doublets) and changes of meaning, and finishes with an overview of the creation of neologisms in the medieval language through derivational morphology (prefixation, suffixation, compounding). The book concludes with an anthology composed of three extracts from Spanish prose texts, one each from the thirteenth, fourteenth, and fifteenth centuries. The extracts contain footnotes that highlight relevant morphological, syntactic, and lexical features, with cross references to the relevant sections in the body of the book.
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