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1

Barbara, McClintock. The discovery and characterization of transposable elements: The collected papers of Barbara McClintock. New York: Garland Pub., 1987.

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2

Wisconsin-Madison), International Symposium on Plant Transposable Elements (1987 University of. Plant transposable elements. New York: Plenum Press, 1988.

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3

Mobile DNA: Finding treasure in junk. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: FT Press, 2011.

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4

Richter, Grace Yukiko. Molecular characterization of specificity and activity of the transposable element IS801. 1995.

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5

H, Saedler, and Gierl A, eds. Transposable elements. Berlin: Springer-Verlag, 1996.

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6

E, Lambert Michael, McDonald John F. 1947-, Weinstein I. Bernard, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, and Abbott Laboratories, eds. Eukaryotic transposable elements as mutagenic agents. Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 1988.

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7

Sniegowski, Paul D. Transposable elements and polymorphic inversions in Drosophila melanogaster. 1993.

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8

Lambert, Michael E., and John F. McDonald. Eukaryotic Transposable Elements As Mutagenic Agents (Banbury Report) (Banbury Report). Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Pr, 1988.

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9

Capy, Pierre, Thierry Langin, Dominique Anxolabehere, and Claude Bazin. Dynamics and Evolution of Transposable Elements. International Thomson Publishing Services, 1998.

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10

Plant Transposable Elements Topics in Current Genetics. Springer, 2012.

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11

Plant Transposable Elements (Basic Life Sciences, Vol 47) (BASIC LIFE SCIENCES). Springer, 1988.

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12

Plant DNA infectious agents. Wien: Springer-Verlag, 1987.

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13

Carey, Nessa. Junk DNA: A Journey Through the Dark Matter of the Genome. Columbia University Press, 2015.

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14

Carey, Nessa. Junk DNA: A Journey Through the Dark Matter of the Genome. Columbia University Press, 2017.

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15

Carey, Nessa. Junk DNA: A Journey Through the Dark Matter of the Genome. Icon Books, Limited, 2015.

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16

Carey, Nessa. Junk DNA: A Journey Through the Dark Matter of the Genome. Icon Books Ltd, 2015.

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17

Junk DNA: A journey through the dark matter of the genome. 2015.

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18

Carey, Nessa. Junk DNA: A Journey Through the Dark Matter of the Genome. Icon Books, Limited, 2015.

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19

Gene conversion of Ty elements and other insertions in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 1988.

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20

Zimmermann, Eva. Morphological Length and Prosodically Defective Morphemes. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198747321.001.0001.

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This book investigates the phenomenon of Morphological Length-Manipulation: processes of segment lengthening, shortening, deletion, and insertion that cannot be explained by phonological means but crucially rely on morpho-syntactic information. A unified theoretical account of these phenomena is presented and it is argued that Morphological Length-Manipulation is best analysed inside the framework termed ‘Prosodically Defective Morphemes’: if all possible Prosodically Defective Morpheme representations and their potential effects for the resulting surface structure are taken into account, instances of length-manipulating non-concatenative morphology and length-manipulating morpheme-specific phonology are predicted. The argumentation in this book is hence in line with the general claim that all morphology results from combination and that non-concatenative exponents are epiphenomenal and arise from affixation of autosegmental elements. Although this position has been defended various times for specific phenomena, it has rarely been discussed against the background of a broad typological survey. In contrast to most existing claims, the argumentation in this book is based on a representative data set for attested morphological length-manipulating patterns in the languages of the world that serves as basis for the theoretical arguments. It is argued that alternative accounts suffer from severe under- and overgeneration problems if they are tested against the full range of attested phenomena.
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Bobaljik, Jonathan David, and Heidi Harley. Suppletion is local. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198778264.003.0007.

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Bobaljik (2012) proposes that the insertion of suppletive vocabulary items can be sensitive to features within the same maximal projection, but not across a maximal projection boundary. Among heads (X0 nodes), this condition restricts suppletion to synthetic formations and excludes suppletion in analogous analytic formations. In Hiaki, however, the number of a subject DP can trigger verbal suppletion in certain intransitive verbs. The verbs in question, however, can be shown by language-internal diagnostics to be unaccusative. Suppletion, then, is in fact triggered by an element within the maximal projection of the suppleting verb. The analysis supports the position that internal arguments are base-generated as sisters to their selecting verb (Kratzer 1996; Marantz 1997; Harley 2014). Further, we see that the locality condition does not distinguish between word-internal and word-external triggers of suppletion, but is rather a condition of structural locality, showing that morphological structure is, in a fundamental way, syntactic.
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