Academic literature on the topic 'Affixation'

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Journal articles on the topic "Affixation"

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Kasim, Amrah, Kamaluddin Abu Nawas, Saidna Zulfiqar Bin Tahir, Yusriadi Yusriadi, and Asma Gheisari. "Bugis and Arabic Morphology: A Contrastive Analysis." Education Research International 2022 (April 12, 2022): 1–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2022/9031458.

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This study is aimed at (1) describing the process of word formation using al-ziyaadah and affixation in Bugis and Arabic, (2) revealing the meaning of al-ziyaadah and affixation in forming a word in Bugis and Arabic, and (3) analyzing the similarities and differences in substances produced by al-ziyaadah and affixations in Bugis and Arabic. The research applied the library research using a linguistic approach. The primary data was collected and identified through a textbook; then, the types of al-ziyaadah and the affixes in both languages were analyzed. The word forms that adhere to and have an affix were compared, and the final step is to make conclusions based on comparisons and explore some similarities and differences. This study results indicated that the process of word formation in Arabic through al-ziyaadah, namely, al-sawaabiq, al-hasyw, al-lawaahiq, and al-muzdawijah. Meanwhile, in the Bugis language, the process of word formation is through affixation. The types of affixes in the Buginese language are prefixes, infixes, suffixes, confixes, and affixes. The word formation process with al-ziyaadah and affixation is the same as al-sawaabiq and prefixes, al-hasyw and infix, al-lawaahiq and suffixes, and al-muzdawijah and confixes. Meanwhile, the combination of affixes only exists in the Buginese language. The formation of words through al-ziyaadah in Arabic and affixation in Bugis contain similarities and differences. The overall meaning produced by al-ziyaadah and affixation is ninety-eight meanings, al-ziyaadah generates thirty-six meanings, and affixations generate sixty-two meanings. This research could be a valuable reference for further researchers who want to study languages and prevent regional languages extinction in the modern era.
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Akinlabi, Akinbiyi. "Featural affixation." Journal of Linguistics 32, no. 2 (September 1996): 239–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022226700015899.

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Underlying free (floating) features occur crosslinguistically. These features sometime function as morphemes. Such features, like segmental morphemes, often refer to specific edges of the stem, hence they are ‘featural affixes’. They get associated with the base to be prosodically licensed. We propose to account for the association of such features through a family of alignment constraints called ‘featural alignment’ which is a featural version of McCarthy & Prince's Align (MCat, MCat). Under featural alignment, an edge is defined for a feature based on a possible licensor, which may be a root node or a mora. We argue that misalignment takes place under pressure from feature co-occurrence constraints. Thus a featural suffix may get realized elsewhere in the stem, surfacing as a featural infix or even as a featural prefix. This constraints based approach is preferred to rule-based approaches since it does not require a variety of additional assumptions needed within rule-based approaches to account for the same phenomenon. These include structure preservation, prespecification, extrationality and filters.
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Meinawati, Euis, and Sufi Alawiyah. "AFFIXATION IN THE SCRIPT SONG LYRIC “HALL OF FAME”." Research and Innovation in Language Learning 1, no. 2 (May 18, 2018): 89. http://dx.doi.org/10.33603/rill.v1i2.1108.

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The objective of researchis to analyze affixation in The Script song lyric. The main purpose of this research is to know how affixation process happens in The Script song lyric “Hall of Fame”. The method used in this research isdescriptive qualitative method. The data used the text script oflyric. It will be an object to know how affixation process happens and what the influencescauses by affixation itself. The result of this analysis shows that affixation process dividedintwo types depends on affixes itself.
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Fatinah, Siti. "Afiksasi dalam Bahasa Mori." Multilingual 19, no. 2 (December 19, 2020): 91–104. http://dx.doi.org/10.26499/multilingual.v19i2.161.

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Affixation in Mori language has various forms and functions. The research studies about how the form and function of affixation in Mori language are. The research intends to describe the form and function of affixation in Mori language. The method used in collecting data is the participatory method. The data is analyzed using the intralingual correspondence method through the substitution technique. The result of research illuminates that the form of affixation in Mori language is classified as prefixation, infixation, suffixation, con-fixation, and affixation combined. There are eight prefixations found, such as moN-, meN-, poN-, te-, pe-, in-, poko-, and um-. MoN- and poN- prefixation are embedded either in the base form or prefixed word. Infixations found are -in- and -um. Infixation -in- is embedded either in the base form or in the affixed form. Suffixation found consists of three suffixation, namely -o, -a, and -i. in Mori language, confixation are three, they are a-a, po-a, and pe-a. Combinations of affixation are five, affixation of moN-ako, meN-ako, i-in, in-ako, and in-i. Affixation aforementioned functions to form verb and affixed noun. Besides, affixation also functions to change part of the speech of the base form and confirms the meaning of its base form.
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Drijkoningen, Frank. "Affixation and Logical Form." Linguistics in the Netherlands 11 (October 6, 1994): 25–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/avt.11.05dri.

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Denafri, Bram, Mery Melati, and Sabri Koebanu. "Affixation Process in Sundanese." JURNAL ARBITRER 6, no. 2 (October 23, 2019): 87. http://dx.doi.org/10.25077/ar.6.2.87-91.2019.

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This article focuses on the form of the affixation process in Sundanese. This study uses a qualitative approach. The data in this study are Sundanese sentences that contain affixation. The data sources in this study are (1) Sundanese dictionaries and (2) Sundanese speakers. The researcher collects data directly involved and is not directly involved in conversations with speakers of Sundanese. Furthermore, researchers also use note-taking techniques. Data analysis using the segmenting immediate constituent technique. Prefix in Sundanese consists of several types, including meN-~{n-}~{ny-}~{m-}~{ng}, pa-, pi-, pang-, sa-, si-, ti-, di-, ka-, ba-, and per-. Infix in Sundanese includes -ar-, -al-, -um-, and -in-. Sufix in Sundanese, several types of suffixes including -an, -eun, -na, -keun, -ing, and -ning. Confix in Sundanese includes ka - an, pa - an, pang - na, pang-keun, pi - eun, pika - eun, sa - eun, sa - na, - keun, and n - keun.
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Quebec, Jett C. "Morphologic Segmentation Linearity in Jose Garcia Villa's PROEM." JETAL: Journal of English Teaching & Applied Linguistic 3, no. 2 (April 19, 2022): 12–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.36655/jetal.v3i2.656.

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Morphology is the study of the intertwined relationship of morphemes, or what we commonly refer to as "words.". Analysis of words enables us to experience how to break apart unfamiliar words in order to understand their overall meanings. It aids us in understanding how prefixes and suffixes can change a word's meaning and how much of our language is constructed. This paper aims to analyze morphologically the textuality of the poem Proem by Jose Garcia Villa by describing the segmentation of the content and function words in the textuality of the poem PROEM focusing on the affixation structuration of the lexical and grammatical morphemes. The linear morphologic segmentation of morphemic contents of the poem "PROEM" by Jose Garcia Villa reveals nineteen lexical morphemes. There are ten (10) simple form (roots), seven (7) complex forms (affixations and roots), one (1) compound form (two roots combined), and one (1) compound–complex form (two roots combined and affixation). On the other hand, there are seven (7) grammatical morphemes of three prepositions, two determiners and two conjunctions. It further reveals that words undergo changes in terms of their class after going through the process of affixation. The results prove that the poem "Proem" by Jose Garcia Villa follows morphologic segmentation linearity in its free verse textuality. This study thus recommends that a parallel morphological investigation be conducted on different textualities of poetry used and read by teachers and students in the process of academic discourse.
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Igaab, Zainab Kadim, and Israa Ali Kareem. "Affixation in English and Arabic: A Contrastive Study." English Language and Literature Studies 8, no. 1 (February 8, 2018): 92. http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/ells.v8n1p92.

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The present study is descriptive, analytic and comparative because it describes affixation in English and Arabic to arrive at the similarities and differences between the two languages. This study aims at describing, analyzing and comparing affixation in English and Arabic by defining it, showing ways of classifying affixes and illustrating their types. The final finding of this study is that affixation is found in the compared languages. English is concerned with the types of affixes through the process of affixation. Arabic is interested in the idea of al-wazn in the process of affixation and it does not pay much attention to the types of affixes though both of the two languages have the same ways of classifying affixes.
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Tarigan, Karisma Erikson, and Margaret Stevani. "THE USE OF DERIVATIONAL SUFFIXES STRATEGY TO ENHANCE STUDENTS’ MORPHOLOGICAL AWARENESS OF VOCABULARY MASTERY AT SMP SANTO PETRUS MEDAN IN THE ACADEMIC YEAR 2017/2018." Jurnal Ilmiah Aquinas 3, no. 2 (July 6, 2020): 348–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.54367/aquinas.v3i2.789.

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Vocabulary learning plays an important role in vocabulary acquisition, one possible way to achieve it is by using derivational suffixes. The purpose of the study is to know the students’ responses after they are taught with affixation strategy. The subject of this study is the students of Class IX-1 of SMP Santo Petrus Medan in the academic year of 2017/2018. This study is conducted by applying descriptive qualitative research and in the form of survey research. (The instruments of collecting data are quantitative data (questionnaire) and qualitative data (field notes). The result of questionnaire shows that most of the students choose item Strongly Agree whose percentage is 85.79% and item Agree whose percentage is 14.20%. This finding proves that the students’ learning behavior changed positively, that is, their attitude and motivation heightened significantly by using derivational suffixes strategy to teach vocabulary. The data of students’ morphological awareness response of the use of derivational suffixes shows that: (1) Affixation helps to remember English vocabulary better, (2) Affixation helps connect vocabulary with its meaning, (3) Affixation helps to develop vocabulary, (4) Affixation helps to recognize noun, verb, adjective, and adverb, (5) Affixation helps to separate form and meaning between root and affix, (6) The rules of affixation make students understand the good spelling of vocabulary, and (7) Affixation supports English learning. These indicate that there is a significant improvement of the students’ vocabulary mastery through derivational suffixes strategy of Class IX-1 of SMP Santo Petrus Medan in the academic year of 2017/2018.
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Fadhila, Aulia Zahra. "ANALISIS AFIKSASI DALAM ALBUM “DEKADE” LAGU AFGAN." Jurnal Ilmiah Langue and Parole 4, no. 1 (December 31, 2020): 11–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.36057/jilp.v4i1.441.

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The research conducted was entitled "Affixation Analysis in the DEKADE Afgan Song Album". This research was conducted using qualitative methods. The data used in the study were taken from the lyrics of the Afgan song on the album "DEKADE" which is available on sites on the internet. The problem discussed was the use of affixes to Afgan's song lyrics in DEKADE's album. The results of the research conducted show that there are many uses of affixation in the lyrics of agu Afgan. There are 112 words that contain affixations in the Afgan song lyrics on the album. Of the 112 data found with affixes, suffixes had the highest percentage of usage. There were 69 data suffixes that were found, consisting of the suffixes kan-, -nya, -an, and -i. The suffix that is mostly found is kan-, while the suffix with the smallest frequency of occurrence is the suffix -an. Like suffixes, prefixes are also found in the lyrics of the song. The prefix found in 24 data consisted of tar, ber-, di-, mem-, and se-. Meanwhile, in the confixes of the song lyrics, there are 9 data consisting of performances and occasional data.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Affixation"

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Carter, Allyson. "Featural Morphology: Evidence from Muna Irrealis Affixation." University of Arizona Linguistics Circle, 2000. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/311814.

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Da, Conceição Manuel. "Pronominal affixation and cliticization in Romance and Bantu languages /." Thesis, Connect to this title online; UW restricted, 2007. http://hdl.handle.net/1773/8392.

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Голубченко, Н. О. "Способи творення денумеративів-іменників." Thesis, Сумський державний університет, 2013. http://essuir.sumdu.edu.ua/handle/123456789/30549.

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Провідне місце серед самостійних денумеральних частин мови належить іменнику, що забезпечує можливість мислити предметно та інтерпретує предметну частину мовної картини світу. При цитуванні документа, використовуйте посилання http://essuir.sumdu.edu.ua/handle/123456789/30549
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Zapotochna, L. I. "Affixation in the process of word formation in English cardiologic terminology." Thesis, БДМУ, 2017. http://dspace.bsmu.edu.ua:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/17351.

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Kharytonava, Olga. "The morphology of affix sharing in Turkish." University of Arizona Linguistics Circle, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/139410.

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This paper analyses the phenomenon of Suspended Affixation (SA) which refers to a situation in coordinated constructions when affixes on the final conjunct have scope over all the non-final conjuncts. The main goal of this paper is to look at the structure of SA for Noun Compound Coordination and to find out how pl and poss suffixes behave regarding suspension. Previous studies have shown that in N and NP coordination poss cannot be suspended leaving pl on the non-final conjunct. This study tests the suspendability of poss in the context of Noun Compound coordination. Since SA seems to represent gradient judgment data two acceptability judgment studies were conducted to find out the (un)grammaticality of Noun Compound constructions. The results show that pl and poss suffixes cannot be suspended for independent reasons. The suspendability of poss does not depend on the presence/absence of pl in the structure due to its structural position. This article proposes an analysis of SA in N and NP coordination which represents a combination of two approaches on SA already proposed in literature and is based on the idea of Parallel Merge proposed by Citko (2005). SA in N and NP coordination is considered to be a coordination of fully inflected conjuncts where the inflections are parallel-merged with two conjuncts (final and non-final). I show that due to the structure of Noun Compound coordination constructions, pl and poss cannot be parallel-merged because of a minimality condition: a non-final conjunct has to be a Minimal Morphological Word.
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Ericsson, Anna. "Occupational terms in The Daily Aztec & The San Diego Union Tribune : Non sexist vs. sexist language." Thesis, Växjö University, School of Humanities, 2008. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:vxu:diva-2038.

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In English usages such as mankind and job titles ending in -man (fireman, chairman) when referring to people in general are considered sexist. Sexist language makes a distinction between women and men and it can exclude, trivialize or diminish women. Therefore, the aim of this paper was to study the sexist or non-sexist use of occupational terms in The San Diego Union Tribune and The Daily Aztec. The questions that were investigated were how the newspapers used affixed terms ending in –man and -woman, if they added female/woman/lady to refer to women, but also how they referred to traditional female professions (nurse, midwife). The study was conducted by hand by using a textual analysis, which was both qualitative and quantitative in nature. The study showed that the newspapers primarily use non-sexist occupational terms and avoid using female markings, even when reference is being made to women who have traditional male professions. The sexist usage that was most common was the affixed terms ending in –man and –woman. One conclusion that could be drawn was that The San Diego Union Tribune follows The Associated Press Stylebook’s policy about the usage of coined words such as chairperson and spokesperson.

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Hale, Rebecca O. "POSITION CLASS PRECLUSION: A COMPUTATIONAL RESOLUTION OF MUTUALLY EXCLUSIVE AFFIX POSITIONS." UKnowledge, 2014. http://uknowledge.uky.edu/ltt_etds/3.

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In Paradigm Function Morphology, it is usual to model affix position classes with an ordered sequence of inflectional rule blocks. Each rule block determines how (or whether) a particular affix position is filled. In this model, competition among inflectional rules is assumed to be limited to members of the same rule block; thus, the appearance of an affix in one position cannot be precluded by the appearance of an affix in another position. I present evidence that apparently disconfirms this restriction and suggests that a more general conception of rule competition is necessary. The data appear to imply that an affixation rule may in some cases override a rule introducing an affix occupying another, distinct position. I propose that each inflectional rule R carry two indices — the first, as usual, specifying the position of the affix introduced by R. The second, however, specifies the position(s) that R satisfies. By default, these two indices identify the same position. However, where one affix precludes another, the second index of the appearing affix specifies two affix positions: the one in which it appears and the one which it precludes. With both blocks satisfied, no other rules which fill either may be applied.
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Corbin, Danielle. "Morphologie derivationnelle et structuration du lexique." Paris 8, 1987. http://www.theses.fr/1987PA080100.

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Cet ouvrage tente d'elaborer et d'appliquer au lexique construit (par affixation et conversion) du francais un ensemble coherent et hierarchise de regles et de principes constituant une grammaire generative du lexique. L'hypothese fondamentale sur laquelle repose ce travail est la suivante : les irregularites de tous ordres observables sur la partie attestee du lexique construit cachent des regularites profondes gouvernees par cette grammaire. Sont d'abord envisages les obstacles qui empechent le morphologue de depasser le niveau de l'"evidence": difficultes d'acces aux materiaux, pesanteur des conceptions et des outils traditionnels de l'analyse des mots construits. Les irregularites observables sont soumises a un tri qui permet d'isoler les fausses irregularites, d'origine essentiellement extralinguistique, les sous-regularites, d'ordre formel et semantique, et les veritables idiosyncrasies. Cette redistribution des exceptions apparentes permet de distinguer divers types de mots complexes, de definir de facon contrainte la notion d'operation derivationnelle, enfin de justifier la construction de divers types de regles lexicales hierarchisees entre elles. Est ensuite explicite le fonctionnement detaille d'un modele lexical reposant sur cette analyse stratifiee des donnees. Ce modele est organise en trois composants qui formalisent respectivement les materiaux non construits qui servent aux regles (composant de base), les regles de construction des mots (composant derivationnel), et un ensemble ordonne de filtres charges de conformer le lexique de droit au lexique de fait (composant conventionnel). Il presente vis-a-vis des modeles lexicalistes concurrents l'originalite d'etre a la fois associatif (les regles attribuent aux mots construits une structure morphologique et une interpretation semantique associees), surgeneratif par rapport au lexique atteste, et stratifie, puisque l'organisation du modele respecte la hierarchie des regularites et des diverses irregularites. L'ouvrage est complete par seize annexes developpant des points particuliers ou fournissant des inventaires, et quatre index
This work tries to construct a consistent set of rules and principles organized into a hierarchy and constituting a generative grammar of the lexicon, to be applied to the french lexicon built by affixation and conversion. The main hypothesis is : behind the various irregularities one may observe in the attested part of the "built lexicon", lie deep regularities governed by a grammar such as the one here constructed. First, i analyze the reasons why the morphologists cannot generally see further than the obvious level : difficulties in the access to the material, burdensomeness of the traditional conceptions and tools used for the analysis of the derived words. Second, i sift out the observable irregularities in order to select (i) the apparent irregularities, most of them being extralinguistical, (ii) the formal and semantic subregularities, and (iii) the pure idiosyncrasies. This new classification of the apparent exceptions enables to mark off various types of complex words, then to define restrictively the concept of "derivational operation", finally to justify the hierarchy of various types of lexical rules presented here. Third, the detailed functioning of a lexical model based on such a stratified analysis of the data is explicitly described. This model is organized in three components that formalize (i) the underived material to be used by the rules ("base component"), (ii) the word formation rules ("derivational component"), and (iii) an ordered set of filters which function it is to adjust the de jure lexicon to the de facto one ("conventional component"). In comparison with the other leicalist models, this one is original, being altogether associative (the rules give to the derived words a morphological structure and a semantical interpretation that are associated), overgenerative when compared to the attested lexicon, and stratified, since the model organization agrees with the hierarchy of the regularities and of the various irregularities. The work is completed by sixteen annexes detailing spcific topics or giving corpus, plus four indexes
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Prené, Emma. "Dumbledore, Remembrall and OWLs : Word formation processes of neologisms in the Harry Potter books." Thesis, Linnéuniversitetet, Institutionen för språk och litteratur, SOL, 2012. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:lnu:diva-24075.

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This thesis investigates the word formation processes of the neologisms in the Harry Potter books by JK Rowling. The aim is to find the frequencies of these processes and then discuss why the frequency looks this way. By collecting and analysing the neologisms with the help of the classification of Plag (2003) and Ljung (2003), the frequencies of the different formation processes is established. The reasons why the distribution of word formation processes looks this way is then discussed and compared to the background information about the author. The conclusion is that compound is the most frequent word formation of this sample. The arguments why the distribution looks this way could be that the semantic meaning of the Harry Potter words is important and that many of the neologisms are based on humour, mythology and folklore.
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Tseng, Meylysa, and 曾士芬. "Reduplication as Affixation in Paiwan." Thesis, 2003. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/08640150552364769163.

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碩士
國立中正大學
語言學研究所
91
Abstract In this thesis I investigate the morphological structure of reduplication in Northern Paiwan, a Formosan language of Southern Taiwan. The main objective is to use Optimality Theory (OT), as first formulated by Prince and Smolensky (1993), to show that reduplication can be considered the same as affixation. This is in support of Marantz (1982). I do this by first classifying reduplication into two classes: prefixing (Ca reduplication or CaRED) and suffixing (root reduplication or RtRED). Factors determining these classes are phonological structure and semantics. Phonologically, RtRED is dimoraic and copies all of its segments from the stem. CaRED, on the other hand, is monomoraic with the vowel invariably surfacing as a. I find that the more prototypical and commonly used reduplication, RtRED, also has the more prototypical semantic functions of reduplication. CaRED, on the contrary, has more specialized meanings with a narrower distribution. Next, I show that reduplication and affixation follow the same constraints. Thus, suffixal reduplicants follow the same constraints as suffixes and prefixal reduplicants follow the same constraints as prefixes. In addition, suffixes and prefixes can also follow constraints previously restricted to the domain of reduplication. One of the conclusions that come forth from the analysis is that templates are needed to describe Paiwan root reduplication. This is in opposition to recent efforts by McCarthy (1997), Gafos (1998) and Spaelti (1999) to eliminate template constraints. My analysis also needs to consider the word-final coda to be extraprosodic. To do so, following Harris and Gussmann (1998), word final codas are reanalyzed as onsets. In this way, word-final codas will not violate No-Coda. In addition, I look at Max-BR and how it has no important role in analyses that require templates. I also choose to work in Spaelti's (1999) lexical-surface (LS) framework, as opposed to McCarthy and Prince's (1995a) input-base-reduplicant (IBR) framework. I motivate this by showing that the LS interface will solve all of the problems created by the IBR interface. With this analysis arises one complete OT grammar which can be used to analyze both reduplicants and affixes. In addition, included in the Appendix is a successful application of this grammar to Thao, another Formosan language. This analysis shows how the grammar can handle word-internal codas and consonant clusters, both of which are abundant in Thao and missing in Paiwan.
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Books on the topic "Affixation"

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The syntax of verbal affixation. Tübingen: M. Niemeyer Verlag, 1989.

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Diachronic studies in lexicology, affixation, phonology. Amsterdam: J. Benjamins Pub. Co., 1992.

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Early Middle English word formation: Semantic aspects of derivational affixation in the AB language. Frankfurt am Main: P. Lang, 1993.

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Library of Congress. Copyright Office. Methods of affixation and positions of the copyright notice on various types of works: Section 201.20 : [section] 201.20, 37 C.F.R. [Washington, D.C: Copyright Office, Library of Congress, 1993.

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Wortbildung des Substantivs im Dänischen: Explizite und implizite Derivation = Noun derivation in modern Danish : affixational and affixless. Poznań: Wydawnictwo Naukowe UAM, 2011.

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Drijkoningen, Frank. Syntax of Verbal Affixation. De Gruyter, Inc., 1989.

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Santana-Lario, Juan, and Salvador Valera-Hernández, eds. Competing Patterns in English Affixation. Peter Lang CH, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.3726/b10608.

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Zúñiga, Fernando. Mapudungun. Edited by Michael Fortescue, Marianne Mithun, and Nicholas Evans. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199683208.013.40.

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Mapudungun, an unclassified language of southern Chile and south-central Argentina spoken by a somewhat uncertain but sizeable number of speakers, has word-formation phenomena that deserve to be called polysynthetic according to most of the (sometimes mutually exclusive) definitions of this term found in the descriptive and typological literature. Polypersonalism, productive nominal incorporation, a limited amount of lexical affixation, alongside significant grammatical affixation, and especially root-serializing/compounding processes lead to long and complex templatically structured verbal predicates that markedly contrast, not only with rather simple nouns in the same language, but also with predicates in many other languages of the region. This chapter describes the major word-formation processes of Mapudungun paying special attention to the typologies of polysynthesis that have been proposed in previous studies on the subject.
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Getting a Fix on Vocabulary, Using Words in the News: The System of Affixation and Compounding in English. Pro Lingua Associates, 1991.

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Zbierska-Sawala, Anna. Early Middle English Word Formation: Semantic Aspects of Derivational Affixation in the Ab Language (Bamberger Beitrage Zur Englischen Sprachwissenschaft). Peter Lang Publishing, 1992.

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Book chapters on the topic "Affixation"

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Pierce, Amy E. "Inflectional Affixation." In Studies in Theoretical Psycholinguistics, 69–88. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-011-2574-1_4.

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Bauer, Laurie, Salvador Valera, and Ana Díaz-Negrillo. "Affixation vs. conversion." In Variation and Change in Morphology, 15–32. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/cilt.310.01bau.

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Štekauer, Pavol. "Compounding and Affixation." In Morphology and its demarcations, 151–59. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/cilt.264.10ste.

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Mithun, Marianne. "Affixation and Morphological Longevity." In Yearbook of Morphology 1994, 73–97. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-3714-2_3.

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Abney, Steven P. "Syntactic Affixation and Performance Structures." In Studies in Natural Language and Linguistic Theory, 215–27. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 1991. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-011-3196-4_12.

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Reis, Marga. "Against Höhle’s Compositional Theory of Affixation." In Studies in German Grammar, edited by Jindrich Toman, 377–406. Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter, 1985. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9783110882711-013.

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Booij, Geert. "Prosodic restrictions on affixation in Dutch." In Yearbook of Morphology, 183–201. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-3726-5_7.

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Zimmermann, Eva. "Templates as Affixation of Segment-sized Units." In The Segment in Phonetics and Phonology, 314–36. Chichester, UK: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781118555491.ch15.

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Fabb, Nigel. "7. Doing Affixation in the GB syntax." In Morphology and Modularity, edited by Martin Everaert, Mieke Trommelen, and Riny Huybregt, 129–46. Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter, 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9783110882674-009.

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Brunelle, Marc. "Chapter 2. The loss of affixation in Cham." In Typological Studies in Language, 97–118. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/tsl.129.02bru.

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Conference papers on the topic "Affixation"

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Kudadiri, Amhar, and Asrul Siregar. "Forms of Noun Affixation in Pakpak Language." In International Conference of Science, Technology, Engineering, Environmental and Ramification Researches. SCITEPRESS - Science and Technology Publications, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5220/0010069712091213.

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Gemini, Reni Putri, Hermawati Syarif, and Hamzah. "Exploring Students’ Affixation Error on Writing Hortatory Exposition Essay." In Eighth International Conference on Languages and Arts (ICLA-2019). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/assehr.k.200819.051.

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Hammarström, Harald. "A naive theory of affixation and an algorithm for extraction." In the Eighth Meeting of the ACL Special Interest Group. Morristown, NJ, USA: Association for Computational Linguistics, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.3115/1622165.1622175.

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Darheni, Nani. "Affixation Language Features on Village/Subdistrict Toponymy in Cirebon Regency." In International Conference on Community Development (ICCD 2020). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/assehr.k.201017.109.

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Radčenko, Marina. "FEATURES OF WORD FORMATION IN CONTEMPORARY MASS MEDIA TEXTS (IN RUSSIAN AND CROATIAN LANGUAGE)." In Aktuální problémy výuky ruského jazyka XIV. Brno: Masaryk University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5817/cz.muni.p210-9781-2020-14.

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Abstract:
The article analyses features of word formation in contemporary Russian and Croatian mass media texts. Active types, models and morphemes of word formation system used in both languages are determined. A comparative analysis of the ways of forming new words shows that occasionalisms in both languages can be created by conventional methods, such as affixation and composition or by non-conventional ways of word formation (contamination, derivation according to a specific pattern, graphoderivation).
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CHEN, JIANI, NAOMI JANSEN, and CAREL TEN CATE. "ZEBRA FINCHES CAN LEARN TO RECOGNIZE AFFIXATIONS." In EVOLANG 10. WORLD SCIENTIFIC, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789814603638_0069.

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