Academic literature on the topic 'Verbal morphology'

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Journal articles on the topic "Verbal morphology"

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Salaberry, Rafael. "Tense Aspect in Verbal Morphology." Hispania 86, no. 3 (September 1, 2003): 559. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/20062909.

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Peterson, David A. "On Khumi Verbal Pronominal Morphology." Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society 28, no. 2 (June 25, 2002): 99. http://dx.doi.org/10.3765/bls.v28i2.1037.

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van Driem, George. "The Proto-Tibeto-Burman verbal agreement system." Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 56, no. 2 (June 1993): 292–334. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0041977x00005528.

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Since the appearance of Stuart N. Wolfenden's monumentalOutlines of Tibeto-Burman linguistic morphologyin 1929, attention has increasingly focused not only on derivational processes in Tibeto-Burman, but also on the flexional morphology of conjugations and declensions. The first systematic comparison of Tibeto-Burman conjugational and pronominal morphology was James John Bauman's elaboratePronouns and pronominal morphology in Tibeto-Burmanin 1975. Bauman put to rest any lingering doubts that the conjugations of Tibeto-Burman languages could be attributed to an Austro- Asiatic substrate, and he adduced a vast body of data demonstrating the nativeness and antiquity of conjugational morphology in Tibeto-Burman. Verbal agreement in Tibeto-Burman has traditionally been known by Hodgson's term ‘pronominalization’, based on the assumption that conjugational affixes ultimately derive from ancient independent pronouns. Bauman demonstrated that the conjugational systems of Tibeto-Burman languages, and therefore any ancient pronominal system they may reflect, are more conservative than the independent pronominal systems attested in individual languages. Based on a comparison of these conjugations, Bauman (1975: 195, 237, 247) proposed the prototypical Tibeto-Burman agreement system shown in tables 1 and 2.
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Press, J. Ian, and Mark J. Elson. "Macedonian Verbal Morphology: A Structural Analysis." Modern Language Review 86, no. 3 (July 1991): 803. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3731136.

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Fowler, George, and Mark J. Elson. "Macedonian Verbal Morphology: A Structural Analysis." Language 67, no. 4 (December 1991): 865. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/415093.

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Németh, Boglárka, and Anna Sőrés. "Evaluative morphology in the verbal domain." Morphology and emotions across the world's languages 42, no. 1 (April 19, 2018): 202–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/sl.00008.nem.

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Abstract So far, evaluative morphology has received less attention in the verbal domain than in the nominal and adjectival ones. This paper shows that – besides frequentative morphemes like -gAt and preverbs like tele- ‘full’, le- ‘down’, fel ‘up’, etc. – in Hungarian events can be evaluated by means of the verbalizer suffix -kVdik. This formation is unusual in evaluative morphology since it is a category-changing operation. The suffix -kVdik can be attached to adjectives and to nouns expressing a profession or an occupation. Depending on the speaker’s intention, the morphologically complex verb suffixed with -kVdik can attribute to the activity an evaluative, mostly pejorative meaning. The paper suggests that this phenomenon goes beyond evaluative morphology and can be better analyzed in terms of morphopragmatics.
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Hyslop, Gwendolyn. "Grammaticalized sources of Kurtöp verbal morphology." Studies in Language 44, no. 1 (May 6, 2020): 132–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/sl.17044.hys.

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Abstract Kurtöp (Tibeto-Burman; Bhutan) has a rich set of finite verbal suffixes which encode evidentiality, mirativity, and egophoricity. This article examines the origins of these suffixes in a typological context, showing how many of them have developed via recent grammaticalizations. Synchronic processes of nominalization and clause-chaining have provided the ideal syntactic contexts for these grammaticalizations to take place. Many of the grammaticalization pathways found here are shown to be typologically common, such as ‘give’ becoming an applicative. We find one suffix, the egophoric, which is an obvious borrowing. Based on the data presented here, this article puts forth the tentative hypothesis that due to principles of iconicity, miratives will tend to be recent grammaticalizations. Similarly, the fact that the Kurtöp egophoric has been borrowed is also, arguably, iconic.
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Dubois, Sylvie, and Barbara M. Horvath. "Verbal Morphology in Cajun Vernacular English." Journal of English Linguistics 31, no. 1 (March 2003): 34–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0075424202250296.

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Lawrence, Aimee. "Reconstruction of Proto-Kampa Verbal Morphology." Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society 38 (September 25, 2012): 256. http://dx.doi.org/10.3765/bls.v38i0.3334.

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<p>In this paper, I adopt a fine-grained approach to reconstruction, reconstructing a number of verbal morphemes for the Kampan branch (a small branch of Arawak). I intend to identify easily-reconstructable morphemes and suggest a preliminary path of development for morphemes that are less transparent.</p>
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Palancar, Enrique L. "Verbal Morphology and Prosody in Otomi." International Journal of American Linguistics 70, no. 3 (July 2004): 251–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/425601.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Verbal morphology"

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Alharbi, Abdallah. "A syntactic approach to Arab verbal morphology." Thesis, University of Essex, 1990. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.277907.

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Marvasti, Parastou. "The acquisition of verbal morphology in Persian." Thesis, University of York, 2014. http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/12887/.

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This study constitutes the first focused description and analysis of the acquisition of Persian inflectional morphology. It focuses on the order in which children acquire the verbal morphological system and also considers factors that influence the order of acquisition. Three monolingual Persian children with the age range of 1;8 to 3;1 were videotaped at one-to-four month intervals in naturalistic interaction with their mothers. Based on transcription of these sessions, the point of acquisition of verbal inflections was determined following two sets of criteria: productivity and contrastive use of inflections (Pizzuto and Caselli, 1994, adjusted to Persian) and deployment of morphemes in obligatory context (Cazden, 1968). The main finding is that although some shared order of emergence and development of productivity can be identified, it is not possible to talk about distinct stages in the acquisition of verbal morphemes, such that the acquisition of number, aspect, mood, tense or person could be said to occur in any set order. For example, in two of the children Person and Mood contrasts develop before AFF/NEG and Tense contrasts, followed by Number and Aspect contrasts; however, Person and AFF/NEG inflections are acquired to full criteria at the same MLU in each child (i.e., 1.5 and 1.9, respectively). The different patterns of productivity along with different pictures of development observed for each of the three children raise the question of what determines which forms will be learned and in which order. The frequency of occurrence of verbal morphemes in the input speech of the three mothers was found to be related to the order of emergence, productivity and contrastive knowledge of the morphemes in the children, whereas the role of typological factors (i.e., perceptual salience and transparency) was not straightforward. The results of the study are consistent with a constructivist account of language acquisition, which sees the acquisition of morphemes as a gradual process activated following considerable exposure to the input in different variations in terms of types and tokens. Furthermore, the findings confirm the interdependence of lexical and morphosyntactic development by demonstrating that it is prompted by an increase in the size of the lexicon over a certain level.
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Taghipour, Sahar. "LAKI VERBAL INFLECTION." UKnowledge, 2017. https://uknowledge.uky.edu/ltt_etds/22.

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This thesis mainly examines inflectional morphology of verbal paradigms in Laki, which is considered as one of the Southern varieties of Kurdish language. The association of form and content of morphological markings are viewed from a realizational angle, in which exponents (morphological forms) are associated with the morphosyntactic properties via the application of rules of exponence, appealed by paradigm functions (Stump 2001) and ordered into rule blocks (Anderson 1992). In particular, I applied the paradigm linkage theory proposed and fully developed by Stump (2002 and 2016) to account for Laki verbal paradigms. In this study, it is claimed that alignment pattern and the syntagmatic combination of some of the inflectional exponents such as agreement markers are sensitive to preterite property. Hence, I argue in favor of considering two distinct morphotactic patternings in Laki. As the result of this assumption, depending on whether the inflectional markers attach to a preterite or a non-preterite stem, we should define two separate sets of affix position in this language. Moreover, I examine Laki polyfunctional agreement markers through the consideration of the morphotactics of this language. Applying Stump's analysis (to appear) of Swahili verbal concords, I consider two distinct types of content for these agreement markers: intrinsic content, and positional content. Their positional content is what the morphotactics of the language determines.
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Twist, Alina Evelyn. "A Psycholinguistic Investigation of the Verbal Morphology of Maltese." Diss., The University of Arizona, 2006. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/194996.

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This dissertation focuses on the unique aspects of Maltese morphology brought about by its genetic and geographic history. The experiments conducted and described here build on past research in Indo-European languages and new research in other Semitic languages to determine how different word formation systems function. Applying experimental techniques to the study of Maltese is crucial for two reasons. First, though Maltese is a Semitic language, recent extensive contact with English has greatly impacted its vocabulary and the structure of its verbs. Though the effects of persistent language contact is pervasive, clear and systematic differences may be observed between native Semitic verbs and those borrowed from English. Secondly, unlike other Semitic languages, the Maltese writing system uses the Roman alphabet. This allows for tests that require the reading of written stimuli to be performed in the same writing system as previous studies in Indo-European languages, eliminating a number of confounding factors.A masked priming experiment asked Maltese speakers to judge whether or not test items were words of their language. The test items included real and nonce verbs of both Semitic and English origin. Accuracy rates and reaction time were recorded and compared across speakers. The results of this experiment support the psychological salience of the consonantal root as a unit of lexical organization.An elicitation experiment asked native speakers of Maltese to provide a verb form that corresponded to a given noun or adjective. The test items were nouns of Semitic and English origin and non-words constructed to resemble such nouns. Responses were broadly transcribed and analyzed for their similarity to the expected patterns. The results show that speakers are able to use two morphological strategies to form new words. The factors affecting the choice between morphological systems include linguistic structure and social variables.Collectively, this pair of experiments indicate that the consonantal root is a viable morphological and psychological unit of lexical organization, supporting a search-based approach to lexical access. Furthermore, speakers are able to form new words on the basis of whole words, showing that this level of organization must also be present to facilitate lexical access.
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Carvalho, Mauricio Oliveira Pires de. "Aspecto verbal na língua Dâw." Universidade de São Paulo, 2016. http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/8/8139/tde-29082016-101849/.

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Este projeto tem o objetivo de descrever e analisar a morfologia de aspecto no idioma indígena amazônico Dâw (aprox. 100 falantes, pertencente à família Nadahup, anteriormente conhecida como Makú) em relação à descrição dada na única gramática disponível do idioma, Gramática e Fonologia Dâw, publicada por Silvana Martins em 2004. Naquela obra, a autora descreve 15 morfemas pós-verbais que chama de marcadores de aspecto, atribuindo funções aspectuais a cada um. Neste trabalho, analisamos a fundo essa afirmação, pondo em dúvida e reanalisando os 15 morfemas ditos aspectuais pela autora, com o intuito de verificar se a descrição da autora está correta. Os novos dados e análises confirmaram apenas parcialmente a análise de Martins, revelando na maioria dos casos que os morfemas desempenham funções bastante divergentes das propostas pela autora. Neste trabalho propomos uma nova classificação para a função desses morfemas, mediante à realização de trabalhos de campo junto aos falantes nativos do idioma no município de São Gabriel da Cachoeira, noroeste da Amazônia. As novas amostras dos trabalhos de campo e análise de outros materiais revelaram que alguns morfemas caíram em desuso, outros não possuem valor aspectual apreciável e outros são morfemas port-manteau tempo-aspecto-modais. Ainda outros possuem outras características, como quantificação dos argumentos do verbo (categoria que como veremos está bastante associada a aspecto) ou função adverbial. Os morfemas com valor aspectual revelaram ter efeitos diferentes com classes de verbos diferentes, como o morfema perfectivo, que com verbos ativos possui função perfectiva de ação concluída no passado, mas com verbos estativos possui valor de aspecto perfeito, ou seja, estado atual causado por transformação no passado. Também incluímos comparações com os sistemas aspectuais de outras línguas do Alto Rio Negro e com línguas tipologicamente similares do mundo inteiro.
This project aims to describe and analyze aspect morphology in the Amazonian indigenous language Dâw (approx. 100 speakers, belonging to Nadahup family, formerly known as Makú) in relation to the description found in the only available grammar on the language, Gramática e Fonologia Dâw, published by Silvana Martins in 2004. In that work, the author describes 15 post-verbal morphemes which she calls aspect markers assigning distinct aspectual functions to each of them. In this paper, we tested that assertion, questioning and eventually reanalyzing the alleged aspectual morpheme, in order to verify whether the description provided by that author is correct. The new data confirmed Martins analysis only partially, revealing in most cases that the morphemes play roles that diverge quite significantly from the authors description. In this paper we propose a new classification for these morphemes, based on the data collected during a field work in July 2015 with native Dâw speakers in São Gabriel da Cachoeira, in the northwestern Brazilian Amazon. The new field work samples and an in-depth analysis of other source materials revealed that some morphemes have become obsolete, others have no discernible aspectual value, and others are port-manteau time-aspect-modal morphemes. Some display features such as quantification of verbal arguments (as we shall see, quantifications is intertwined with aspect) or play adverbial roles. The morphemes with aspectual value were shown to behave differently depending on verbal classes, such as the perfective morpheme, which with active verbs has a perfective function, indicating action completed in the past, but with stative verbs it indicates perfect aspect, i.e., current state caused by transformation in the past. A comparison with the aspectual systems of other Upper Rio Negro languages as well as with other typologically similar languages worldwise is also provided.
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Weyh, Charlène. "L’évolution du système verbal français, entre régularisation et norme (1300 – 1700) : le cas du présent de l’indicatif." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Université de Lorraine, 2024. http://www.theses.fr/2024LORR0258.

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Cette thèse en Sciences du Langage se situe dans le cadre de la morphologie verbale historique et étudie le devenir des alternances de bases au présent de l’indicatif en français. Le cadre global est celui d’une étude linguistique associant description du système verbal du français et histoire des représentations du français, et ce dans une diachronie longue, dans la mesure où certains changements sont très anciens et d’autres sont le fait de la période médiévale, tandis que d’autres datent de l’époque moderne.Nous avons décrit le fonctionnement des paradigmes verbaux en synchronie et en diachronie, tout en définissant les concepts fondamentaux utilisés. Nous sommes ainsi revenue sur la notion de « verbe régulier » et de « verbe irrégulier » d’un point de vue historique. Nous avons distingué l’alternance de bases verbale et la variation phonologique de la base. Nous nous sommes arrêtée sur l’analogie, mécanisme d’alignement fondamental dans l’évolution du système verbal, qui peut jouer à l’intérieur du paradigme ou d’un ensemble de paradigmes du même verbe avec notamment l’extension d’une des bases au détriment de l’autre, comme celle la base aim- à tous les tiroirs et en P4 / P5 de l’indicatif présent du verbe aimer, AF amer. Par ailleurs, aux 16e et 17e siècles, où subsistaient encore de nombreuses hésitations, les grammairiens et remarqueurs ont joué un rôle de descripteur et prescripteur de la langue que nous avons essayé de cerner.Pour mener à bien cette étude, nous avons constitué un corpus de 27 verbes représentant plusieurs types d’alternances verbales, comme treuve/trouvons et aime/amons qui a donné 312 250 occurrences brutes en contexte dans Frantext de l’ancien français à 1799. Les verbes ont été regroupés selon leur alternance de départ pour une étude systématique des fréquences et autres paramètres, afin de comprendre pourquoi des verbes qui présentaient des alternances identiques en ancien français n’ont pas connu le même aboutissement en français moderne, et tenter de déterminer les facteurs favorisant le maintien de l’alternance de bases ou, au contraire, les facteurs qui favorisent l’extension d’une des deux bases verbales au présent de l’indicatif.Finalement, de multiples paramètres ont pu jouer dans les transformations et les normalisations des paradigmes verbaux au présent de l’indicatif : la fréquence d’emploi d’une forme, d’une base ou d’un paradigme, l’appartenance d’un verbe à une famille morphologique, l’analogie intra et interparadigmatique et la prescription linguistique aux 16e et 17e siècles. Nous proposons une hiérarchie des critères
This thesis in Linguistics is part of a study of historical verbal morphology and examines the evolution of alternation of verbal stems in the French present tense. The overall framework is that of a linguistic study combining a description of the French verbal system and the history of representations of French language, in a long diachrony context, as certain changes are very old, and others are the result of the medieval period, while some others date from the modern period.We described the functioning of verbal paradigms in synchrony and diachrony, while defining the fundamental concepts used. We thus redefinied the notion of ‘regular verb’ and ‘irregular verb’ from a historical point of view. The alternation of verbal stems and the phonological variation of the verbal stem have been distinguished. We analysed the concept of analogy, a fundamental alignment mechanism in the evolution of the verbal system, that can play a role within a paradigm or a set of paradigms of the same verb, in particular with the extension of one of the verbal stems to the detriment of the other, such as the aim stem - in all the tenses and in P4/P5 of the present tense of the verb aimer (to love), Old French amer. Moreover, in the 16th and 17th centuries, when there was still a lot of hesitation, grammarians and Remarqueurs played a role as descriptors and prescriptors of the language, rôle that we have tried to define.To carry out this study, we compiled a corpus of 27 verbs representing several types of verbal alternation, such as treuve/trouvons (to find) and aime/amons (to love), which yielded 312,250 raw occurrences in context in the Frantext corpus, from Old French to 1799. The verbs were grouped according to their initial alternation for a systematic study of frequencies and other parameters, in order to understand why verbs with identical alternations in Old French did not have the same outcome in modern French. We also tried to determine the factors favouring the maintenance of the verbal alternation or, on the contrary, the factors favouring the extension of one of the two verbal stems in the present tense.Finally, we observed several parameters may have played a part in the transformations and standardisation of verbal paradigms in the present tense: the frequency of use of a form, verbal stem or paradigm, whether a verb belongs to a morphological family, the intra and interparadigmatic analogy, and linguistic prescription in the 16th and 17th centuries. A hierarchy of criteria has been proposed
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Moradi, Sedigheh. "LAKI VERBAL MORPHOSYNTAX." UKnowledge, 2015. http://uknowledge.uky.edu/ltt_etds/9.

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Most western Iranian languages, despite their broad differences, show a common quality when it comes to the verbal agreement of past transitive verbs. Dabir-moghaddam (2013) and Haig (2008) discuss it as a grammaticalized split-agreement to encode S, A, and P, which is sensitive to tense and transitivity, and uses split-ergative constructions for its past transitive verbs. Laki shows vestiges of the same kind of verb-agreement ergativity (Comrie 1978) by using a mixture of affixes and clitics for subject and object marking. In this thesis, I investigate how the different classes of verbs show agreement using four distinct property classes. Considering the special case of the {3 sg} and using Hopper and Traugott's pattern for the cline of grammaticality (2003), I argue that although Laki has already lost the main part of its ergative constructions, the case of the {3 sg} marking is yet another sign that this language is in the process of absolute de-ergativization and its hybrid alignment system is moving toward morphosyntactic unity. As a formal representation of the Laki data, the final part of the thesis provides a morphosyntactic HPSG analysis of the agreement patterns in Laki, using the grammar of cliticized verb-forms (Miller and Sag 1997).
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Devos, Maud. "Les extensions verbales en Swahili Standard. East African Languages and Dialects 24. Racine, Odile. Köln: Rüdiger Köppe Verlag, 2015, 251 pp, ISBN 978-3-89645-709-7." Universitätsbibliothek Leipzig, 2017. http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:15-qucosa-220490.

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Okoudowa, Bruno. "Morfologia verbal do Lembaama." Universidade de São Paulo, 2010. http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/8/8139/tde-10112010-153708/.

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Este trabalho propõe a análise da morfologia verbal do lembaama, que é uma língua do subgrupo banto (da floresta), B.62 (Guthrie, 1971), do grupo Benuê-Congo, do tronco Nigero-congolês. Como esta língua não apresenta nenhum estudo deste gênero, espera-se que esta primeira análise possibilite estudos posteriores neste e em outros campos linguísticos. A análise morfológica dos verbos revelou, primeiramente, que a estrutura verbal dessa língua é composta dos seguintes elementos: sujeito, índice do sujeito, negação1, marca de Tempo, raiz do verbo, extensão, vogal final ou marca de Aspecto, objeto(s) ou índice do objeto, negação2 que se seguem numa ordem fixa na oração. Constatamos que o índice do objeto, que é geralmente anteposto à raiz do verbo na maioria das línguas bantas, é posposto ao verbo em lembaama. A negação, por sua vez, é representada pelo morfema descontínuo composto por dois elementos: ka- (negação1) e -ní (negação2). Sendo que na estrutura verbal, ka- aparece depois do índice do sujeito (à esquerda da raiz do verbo) e -ni aparece depois do índice do objeto (à direita da raiz do verbo), é o último elemento da estrutura do verbo. Ao estudar a derivação verbal em lembaama, constatamos que a estrutura das extensões desta língua difere daquela encontrada nas outras línguas bantas pelo fato do lembaama ter acrescentado à estrutura -VC- preexistente no protobanto, estruturas do tipo -C-, -CV- e -CVC-. A extensão mais comum e mais fácil de ser reconhecida nessa língua é aquela que marca o habitual, tanto no presente (-ag-) como no passado (-ig-). O estudo dos sufixos derivativos do lembaama revelou também a existência de uma correlação entre o valor gramatical e o valor semântico das extensões. Vimos que seres humanos e animados são envolvidos em orações que apresentam uma transitividade alta. O estudo da transitividade mostrou-se, ainda, como uma noção fundamental nessa língua porque distingue ações e estados, por exemplo. Quanto à análise das categorias Tempo, Aspecto e Modo (TAM), essa língua evidenciou três tempos: um presente que não tem marcas e que se confunde com o presente pontual, o progressivo e o futuro. Dois futuros: um mais próximo, sem marcas, que se confunde com o presente pontual e o progressivo; outro, mais distante, marcado pelo verbo auxiliar odze \"ir\". Três passados: um recente, marcado pelo morfema mí- de tom alto e anteposto ao radical do verbo; um distante, marcado pelo morfema máá- de tom alto e anteposto ao radical do verbo; um remoto, expresso pela junção do verbo auxiliar -ki \"estar\" e o morfema do passado mí-. Assim, contrariamente aos morfemas de Aspectos, os morfemas de Tempo são sempre antepostos ao radical do verbo. É o caso dos dois morfemas que marcam os passados recente e distante. Há dois aspectos: o perfectivo, marcado pela vogal final -í; o imperfectivo, sem marca específica. A análise dos tempos e dos aspectos revelou que o Aspecto é mais fundamental em lembaama. O estudo dos modos permitiu identificar três: o imperativo, o condicional e o indicativo.
This work proposes an analysis of the verbal morphology of Lembaama (B62) according to Guthrie (1971). Officially called Obamba in Gabon, Lembaama is a Bantu language of the forest, from the Benue-Congo group and Niger-Congo phylum. As far as we know, this language has yet to receive a detailed study. It should be noted that Lembaama shows some interesting features. Indeed, the verbal morphology analysis shows that a single inflected verb contains the following elements: subject, subject marker, negative1, Tense marker, root, extension, Final Vowel or Aspect marker, negative2 occurring in a fix order in a sentence. The object marker comes after the root. Negation consists of a discontinuous morpheme: kaní. Ka- is placed before the root (by the left) and -ní occurs after the root (by the right) being the last element of this structure. The verbal derivation study reveals the following structure of Lembaama extensions: -C-, -CV-, -VC- and -CVC-.The habitual marker -ag- being the commonest extension. This study also highlights the existence of a correlation between the grammatical value and the semantic value of extensions. Hence, human and animate beings are evoked in clauses with higher transitivity than things. Therefore, transitivity is fundamental in Lembaama, as it can distinguish actions from states, for example. Tense, Aspect and Mood study defines three Tenses. First, there is a present that, because it is used without tense marker, can be merged with near future or with progressive. Then, we note two future tenses: a near future (F1) occurring without mark and a distant future (F2) marked by the auxiliary verb odze go. Finally, we count three past tenses: a recent (P1) marked by mí- with a high tone; a distant (P2) marked by máá- with a high tone too, and a remote past (P3) marked by kí be, an auxiliary verb with high tone and mí-, the recent past marker, both coming before the root (by the left). Thus, Tense marker morphemes are always placed before the root (by the left) and Aspect markers occur after the root (by the right). This analysis highlighted two Aspects: a perfective marked by the Final Vowel -í; an imperfective without a specific mark. Tense and Aspect analysis allows to conclude that Aspect is more fundamental than Tense in this language. Concerning Mood, the analysis revealed three: imperative, conditional and indicative.
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Oltra, Massuet Maria Isabel 1966. "On the notion of theme vowel : a new approach to Catalan verbal morphology." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1999. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/9532.

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Books on the topic "Verbal morphology"

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Elson, Mark J. Macedonian verbal morphology: A structural analysis. Columbus, Ohio, USA: Slavica, 1989.

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Blanca Flor Demenjour Munoz Mejia. Morfologia verbal da língua Kaiowá. Curitiba/PR: Appris Editora, 2019.

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Elson, Mark J. A diachronic interpretation of Macedonian verbal morphology. Lewiston, N.Y., U.S.A: E. Mellon Press, 1990.

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Schumacher, Stefan. The historical morphology of the Welsh verbal noun. Maynooth: Dept. of Old Irish, National University of Ireland, Maynooth, 2000.

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Lüders, Ulrich J. The Souletin verbal complex: New approaches to Basque morphophonology. München: Lincom Europa, 1993.

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Bloch-Trojnar, Maria. Polyfunctionality in morphology: A study of verbal nouns in modern Irish. Lublin [Poland]: Wydawn. KUL, 2006.

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Kahn, Lily. The verbal system in late enlightenment Hebrew. Leiden: Brill, 2009.

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Querol, Laia. La morfologia verbal del català nord-occidental: Descripció i anàlisi dels segments velar i palatal. Lleida: Pagès, 2011.

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Maylor, B. Roger. Lexical template morphology: Change of state and the verbal prefixes in German. Amsterdam: J. Benjamins, 2002.

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Junger, Judith. Predicate formation in the verbal system of modern Hebrew. Dordrecht: Foris Publications, 1987.

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Book chapters on the topic "Verbal morphology"

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Gębski, Wiktor. "3. Verbal morphology." In Semitic Languages and Cultures, 91–138. Cambridge, UK: Open Book Publishers, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.11647/obp.0394.03.

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This chapter aims to evaluate the similarities and differences between the verbal systems of the Jewish dialect of Gabes and other Maghrebi dialects. Notably, both Jewish Gabes and Jewish Djerba exhibit gender distinction in the 2FS forms marked by the /-i/ suffix, a feature absent in Jewish Tunis, where masculine forms are also used for the feminine. The study affirms the sedentary nature of Jewish Gabes, indicated by the /-āw/ suffix in verbs with a weak third radical in stem I, in contrast to the /u/ found in Bedouin dialects. Regarding the vowel distribution of stem I verbal forms, Jewish Gabes shares similarities with neighbouring Jewish dialects, particularly in the basic theme vowel being /ə/ or /a/ in proximity to gutturals. In contrast, Muslim dialects and Jewish Wad-Souf demonstrate a broader array of vowel qualities. Additionally, the analysis reveals that Jewish Gabes has developed an alternative method for expressing the passive voice, a bipartite construction involving an active verb with a personal object pronoun.
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Filip, Hana. "Quantifiers and Verbal Morphology." In Aspect, Eventuality Types and Nominal Reference, 225–66. New York: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203827413-6.

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van der Auwera, Johan. "Dutch Verbal Prefixes." In Boundaries of Morphology and Syntax, 121. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/cilt.180.08auw.

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Paster, Mary. "Pulaar verbal extensions and phonologically driven affix order." In Yearbook of Morphology, 155–99. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/1-4020-4066-0_6.

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Lieber, Rochelle, and Harald Baayen. "Verbal prefixes in Dutch: a study in lexical conceptual structure." In Yearbook of Morphology, 51–78. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-3712-8_3.

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Neeleman, Ad, and Joleen Schipper. "Verbal prefixation in Dutch: thematic evidence for conversion." In Yearbook of Morphology 1992, 57–92. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-3710-4_3.

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Calabrese, Andrea. "Locality effects in Italian verbal morphology." In Linguistik Aktuell/Linguistics Today, 97–132. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/la.223.06cal.

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Hoberman, Robert D., and Mark Aronoff. "3. The verbal morphology of Maltese." In Language Processing and Acquisition in Languages of Semitic, Root-Based, Morphology, 61–78. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/lald.28.03hob.

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Kalinina, Elena. "15. The problem of morphological description of verbal forms ambivalent between finite and nonfinite uses." In Morphology 2000, 185–98. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/cilt.218.16kal.

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Zubizarreta, Maria Luisa, and Ton Van Haaften. "17. English -ing and Dutch -en Nominal Constructions: A Case of Simultaneous Nominal and Verbal Projections." In Morphology and Modularity, edited by Martin Everaert, Mieke Trommelen, and Riny Huybregt, 361–94. Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter, 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9783110882674-019.

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Conference papers on the topic "Verbal morphology"

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Davis, Fineen, Eddie Antonio Santos, and Heather Souter. "On the Computational Modelling of Michif Verbal Morphology." In Proceedings of the 16th Conference of the European Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics: Main Volume. Stroudsburg, PA, USA: Association for Computational Linguistics, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.18653/v1/2021.eacl-main.226.

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Gurevich, Olga. "A finite-state model of Georgian verbal morphology." In the Human Language Technology Conference of the NAACL, Companion Volume: Short Papers. Morristown, NJ, USA: Association for Computational Linguistics, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.3115/1614049.1614061.

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Herce, Borja. "VeLePa: a Verbal Lexicon of Pame." In Proceedings of the 21st SIGMORPHON workshop on Computational Research in Phonetics, Phonology, and Morphology. Stroudsburg, PA, USA: Association for Computational Linguistics, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.18653/v1/2024.sigmorphon-1.1.

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Muradoglu, Saliha, Nicholas Evans, and Hanna Suominen. "To compress or not to compress? A Finite-State approach to Nen verbal morphology." In Proceedings of the 58th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics: Student Research Workshop. Stroudsburg, PA, USA: Association for Computational Linguistics, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.18653/v1/2020.acl-srw.28.

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Nose, Masahiko. "A Morphological Analysis of Negation in Amele, Papua New Guinea." In GLOCAL Conference on Asian Linguistic Anthropology 2020. The GLOCAL Unit, SOAS University of London, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.47298/cala2020.6-1.

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Amele is one of the Trans-New Guinea languages spoken in Papua New Guinea. Foley (2000) described that the Trans-New Guinea languages have complicated verbal morphology, including Amele. This study examines negation in Amele, and attempts to clarify its morphological behaviors.
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Nefedov, Andrey. "A Polysynthetic Language in Contact: The Case of Ket." In GLOCAL Conference on Asian Linguistic Anthropology 2019. The GLOCAL Unit, SOAS University of London, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.47298/cala2019.5-2.

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Ket is one of the most enigmatic polysynthetic languages in North Asia. The majority of structural features complicating a clear-cut typological analysis of Ket are due to the long-term contact with the languages of a radically different type that resulted in a peculiar process of structural mimicry (or ‘typological accommodation’ in Vajda’s (2017) terms). The mimicry is most evident in the verbal morphology, which is traditionally regarded as almost exclusively prefixing. While this is true for the oldest layer of verbs with the main lexical root in the final position, Ket’s most productive patterns of verb formation clearly imitate suffixal agglutination typical of the surrounding languages by placing the main lexical root in the initial position with the rest of morphemes following it. This presentation aims to demonstrate that this phenomenon is also attested at the syntactic level. Prototypical polysynthetic languages are largely devoid of overt subordination (cf. Baker 1996). Ket, however, signals adverbial subordination by using postposed relational morphemes attached to fully finite verbs. This pattern is common to adverbial clauses in the neighboring languages, the difference being that they attach relational morphemes to non-finite forms only. This functional-structural parallel is likewise attested in relative clauses. The surrounding languages share a common relativization pattern involving preposed participial relative clauses with a ‘gapped’ relativized noun phrase (Pakendorf 2012). This resembles the major relativization pattern in Ket, in which, however, preposed relative clauses are fully finite. Formation of adverbial and relative clauses in Ket clearly mimics that of the surrounding languages and does not conform to the expected ‘polysynthetic’ pattern. At the same time, Ket resists accommodating a participle-like morphology, which can be connected with the general tendency among polysynthetic languages not to have truly non-finite forms (cf. Nichols 1992).
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TÜRK, Osman. "DETERMINATION OF NOUN-VERBS IN AĞRIDAĞI EFSANESI." In International Research Congress of Contemporary Studies in Social Sciences (Rimar Congress 2). Rimar Academy, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.47832/rimarcongress2-11.

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Verbs in Turkish morphology; It has an important place in terms of preventing unnecessary repetitions by providing a short way to convey what is told, facilitating the transfer of thoughts to be told, making the language fluent and strong by connecting sentences easily and fluently. Noun-verbs in the group of verbs in Turkish, with the addition of -mAk (-mak, -mek), -mA (-ma, -me), -İş (-iş, -iş, -uş, -ş) to the verb stem or body. they are created. Noun-verbs tell the verb's payment and the nouns of the verbs regardless of person and tense. In this page, the noun-verbs and noun-verb affixes in the Legend of Yaşar Kemal's Ağrıdağı, the words that have written names, were determined by scanning method. The words in which the detected nouns-verbs are included are classified according to their structures. The study has been put into writing by adding the place-defined and text numbers of the noun-verbs determined because it is in the text. With the data obtained, the usage numbers of nouns and verbs were given and targeted certain inferences
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Morita, Junya. "Corpus–Based Research into Derivational Morphology: A Comparative Study of Japanese and English Verbalization." In Computational Linguistics in Bulgaria, 178–86. Institute for Bulgarian Language, 2024. https://doi.org/10.47810/clib.24.18.

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As part of elucidating the syntax-morphology interaction, this study investigates where and how complex verbs are formed in Japanese and English. Focusing on the Japanese verbforming suffix -ka-suru (e.g. toshi-o gendaika-suru ‘modernize city’), relevant verbs are extracted from a large-scale corpus and they receive an in-depth analysis from semantic, morphosyntactic, and functional viewpoints. The properties of -ka-suru and those of its English counterpart are then compared and contrasted. The result reveals three main points: (i) -ka-suru verbs are constantly created in syntactic settings to fulfill the functions of brevity and conceptualization, (ii) while denominal -ize derivatives have several submeanings such as ‘result,’ ‘ornative,’ and ‘agentive,’ -ka-suru equivalents retain the meaning ‘result,’ and (iii) -ka-suru can be combined with compound nouns, but -ize cannot. We will demonstrate that the above features originate in the underlying syntactic structure related to each suffix and their difference, thus supporting the thesis of syntactic word formation.
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Onipenko, Nadezhda K., and Elena N. Nikitina. "“Russian verbs: semantics and grammar” dictionary: results of work and perspectives." In Lexicography of the digital age. TSU Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.17223/978-5-907442-19-1-2021-26.

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The paper proposes lexicographic parameters of Russian verbs description in a dictionary of semantics and grammar. The paper pays special attention to connection between semantic clustering of verbs and their morphologic paradigm.
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Delais-Roussarie, Elisabeth, and Cyrille Granget. "La prosodie de la L1 contraint-elle l’acquisition de la morphologie verbale en français L2 ?" In XXXIVe Journées d'Études sur la Parole -- JEP 2022. ISCA: ISCA, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.21437/jep.2022-15.

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