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This book contributes to the recent theoretical developments in the area of mutual interactions of valency and aspect, as expressed in different types of verb-related nominal structures (nominalizations and synthetic compounds). A wide range of data from Slavic, Hellenic, Germanic, Romance and Semitic languages provides an empirical testing ground for competing theoretical explanations couched in the lexicalist and construction-based frameworks.
Comparative linguistics --- Grammar --- Grammar, Comparative and general --- Noun phrase. --- Nominals. --- Syntax. --- Language and languages --- Syntax --- Noun phrase --- Subject (Grammar) --- Nominals (Grammar) --- Noun-equivalents (Grammar) --- Substantives (Grammar) --- Complex nominals --- Subject --- Nominals --- Linguistics --- Philology --- Grammar, Comparative and general Syntax --- Aspect. --- Nominalization. --- Synthetic Compounding. --- Valency.
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Drawing on detailed case studies across a range of languages, including English, German, Dutch, Italian, Portuguese, Polish, Czech, Russian, Lithuanian and Greek, this book examines the different factors that determine the outcome of the interaction between borrowing and word formation.
Language and languages --- Grammar, Comparative and general --- Derivational morphology --- Word formation --- International words --- Loan words --- Loanwords --- Foreign words and phrases. --- Word formation. --- Derivation --- Morphology --- Foreign elements --- Linguistics --- Philology --- Foreign words and phrases
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This pioneering research brings a new insight into derivational processes in terms of theory, method and typology.Theoretically, it conceives of derivation as a three-dimensional system. Methodologically, it introduces a range of parameters for the evaluation of derivational networks, including the derivational role, combinability and blocking effects of semantic categories, the maximum derivational potential and its actualization in relation to simple underived words, and the maximum and average number of orders of derivation.Each language-specific chapter has a unified structure, which made it possible to identify – in the final, typologically oriented chapter – the systematicity and regularity in developing derivational networks in a sample of forty European languages and in a few language genera and families. This is supported by considerations about the role of word-classes, morphological types, and the differences and similarities between word-formation processes of the languages belonging to the same genus/family.
E-books --- Linguistics --- Language and languages --- Grammar, Comparative and general --- Semantics, Comparative. --- Typology (Linguistics) --- Word formation.
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