Academic literature on the topic 'Morphemics'

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Journal articles on the topic "Morphemics"

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Khashimova, Sabokhat Abdullaevna. "On the “Morpheme” Concept in Chinese Linguistics." International Journal of Social Science Research and Review 5, no. 4 (April 1, 2022): 176–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.47814/ijssrr.v5i4.278.

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This article is devoted to the study of morphemes in modern Chinese. The doctrine of morphemes, considered as the smallest units by meaning, is usually included in morphology, which is sometimes allocated in a separate section called morphemics. The object of study of morphemics is not only the grammatical morphemes themselves (formative and inflectional), but also word-forming ones.
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Ratsiburskaya, Larisa Viktorovna. "Word-building science in Russia in the XXI century." Russian Language Studies 17, no. 3 (December 15, 2019): 276–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.22363/2618-8163-2019-17-3-276-299.

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The article presents a review of scientific papers on word-formation and morphemics written in the beginning of the XXI century. Various aspects of modern word-formation science are examined: the study of morphemic and word-formation systems (derivational affixes, derived words, derivational types, methods of derivation, word-building nests) in structural-semantic, synchronic-diachronic, and dynamic aspects. Particular attention is paid to neology, which studies neologisms in socio-cultural, linguo-culturological and linguo-pragmatic aspects.
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Gulmera, Kuchimova. "FROM THE HISTORY OF STUDYING THE MORPHEME STRUCTURE OF THE WORD IN UZBEK LINGUISTICS." American Journal of Philological Sciences 4, no. 4 (April 1, 2024): 46–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.37547/ajps/volume04issue04-09.

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Uzbek linguistics, at first, morphemics was not separated as a separate department, and later the issues studied in morphemics were included in the research of morphology at that time. Consequently, the issues within the scope of morphemics have been studied in our linguistics in the same narrow scope as the concepts of word structure and morphological structure of the word. Morphemics in traditional linguistics considered only the parts of the word consisting of the stem and the affix, and the grammatical function and meaning-carrying parts were considered. Due to the serious and large-scale research carried out later, our linguistics has passed the path of development from the description of the morpheme as an element in the morphological structure of the word to the morpheme-to-word principle. This article talks about the history of the study of the morpheme composition of words in Uzbek linguistics, research conducted by scientists and their results, research methodology.
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DZIUBAK, NATALIIA, NELIA PAVLYK, VIKTORIA LIPYCH, SVITLANA SHULIAK, and ANNA OHAR. "MORPHOLOGY AND MORPHEMOLOGY: WORD STRUCTURE AND MORPHOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF LANGUAGE." AD ALTA: 14/01-XXXIX. 14, no. 1 (January 31, 2024): 79–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.33543/1401397983.

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The article focuses on analyzing the foundational theoretical tenets of morphemology and morphology within contemporary Ukrainian linguistics, emphasizing their intrinsic interrelation. A comprehensive examination of the morpheme as the fundamental linguistic entity for morphemological studies is undertaken. The primary attributes of a morpheme as a linguistic unit are elucidated, facilitating a more proficient comprehension of the principles underlying the morphemic analysis of words. Furthermore, the research delves into the grammatical meanings embodied by morphemes within specific parts of speech, drawing on Ukrainian language lexemes for illustration. The discourse provides a rationale for considering morphemology as an autonomous branch of linguistics, intricately linked with morphology and derivatology. The article delineates distinctions in the application of terms such as "morphemics" versus "morphemology" and "morpheme" versus "morph." A crucial assertion is advanced, substantiating that a morpheme, functioning as the smallest semantically significant constituent of a word, can simultaneously convey lexical, grammatical, and word-formational meanings. The correlation between morphemology and morphology is substantiated by the integral semantics inherent in words, a phenomenon derived from the amalgamation of lexical and grammatical meanings. The confluence of these meanings establishes a word's classification within a specific grammatical category (part of speech) and its affiliation with a particular word-formational type. Similar to a word form, a morpheme exhibits reproducibility in language, possesses a semiological function, and serves to convey both subject (via the root) and non-subject (via affixes) meanings. As with other linguistic entities, morphemes and word forms can be regarded as historical categories, prompting the differentiation of word formation into historical and synchronic aspects. Throughout the historical evolution of a language, alterations in word structure manifest through phonetic changes, the loss of productive affixes, and modifications in the phonemic boundaries of morphemes. Consequently, the framework for synchronic morphemic analysis must not be indiscriminately applied to other synchronic facets of the language.
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Suseeva, Danara. "Morphonological Phenomena in the Kalmyk Language of the 18th Century (Exemplified by the Documents of the National Archive of the Republic of Kalmykia)." Vestnik Volgogradskogo gosudarstvennogo universiteta. Serija 2. Jazykoznanije, no. 4 (December 2021): 64–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.15688/jvolsu2.2021.4.5.

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The results of the analysis of morphonological phenomena in the words of the Kalmyk language of the 18 th century are presented in the article. The research material is comprised of the official business documents of the Kalmyk khans of the 18 th century and their contemporaries, written in the old Kalmyk language, called Todo bichig "clear letter", which were deposited in the National Archive of the Republic of Kalmykia (Fund 36, Inventory1). In Kalmyk linguistics, for the first time, information was obtained about the compatibility of morphemes of the Kalmyk language of the 18 th century and about morphonological phenomena caused by the processes of word- and form building. It was found out that at the junction of morphemes such morphonological phenomena as truncation, overlap, augmentation, alternation, interfixation, vowels lengthening often occurred, and within morphemes – the alternation of short and long vowels. It is revealed that the paradigms of root and subordinate morphemes of the 18 th -century Kalmyk language differ from similar paradigms of the modern language. The results obtained are important not only for understanding the historical grammar of the Kalmyk language, but also for the theoretical grammar of the modern Kalmyk language. The perspective of this study is that its results are the starting point for a new direction – the comparative study of morphemics and morphonological phenomena of related Mongolian languages belonging to the agglutinative type of languages. It becomes possible to compare and contrast not just their single identical root and affixal morphemes (the traditional approach), but also their morphemic paradigms, consisting of allomorphs and variants in both diachronic and synchronous aspects.
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Danilina, Natalia I. "Latin Heritage in Russian Morphemics: Adjectives with Final -alny." Izvestiya of Saratov University. New Series. Series: Philology. Journalism 20, no. 1 (2020): 9–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.18500/1817-7115-2020-20-1-9-14.

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Kazlauskienė, Asta, and Jurgita Cvilikaitė-Mačiulskienė. "The structural patterns of Lithuanian affixes." Studies About Languages, no. 34 (June 3, 2019): 17–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.5755/j01.sal.0.34.21003.

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The aim of this research is to identify the main structural patterns of affixes of Lithuanian inflective words, their productivity and frequency. We present a survey of the structural diversity and productivity of these morphemes rendered in The Dictionary of Modern Lithuanian and in The Grammar of Modern Lithuanian. The frequency data was collected from The Database of the Morphemics of the Lithuanian Language. The morpheme analysis has revealed the following tendencies: 1) while prefixes are always monosyllabic, suffixes and flexions can vary from non-syllabic to trisyllabic, 2) within these morphemes, consonant clusters are not frequent. Prefixes in Lithuanian can have C0-2VC0-2 structure. The most productive and frequent pattern is C1V. Suffixes have structures C1-2, C0-2V(W)C0-3 and C0-1VC1-2VC0-2. The most productive are VC1 of nominal words and C1, VC0-1 verbal suffixes. In usage, VC1 suffixes of nominal words and V, C1 as well as VC1 verb patterns dominate. Flexions can have the following structures: C1, VC0-2, VC1VC0-1 or VC1VC1VC0-1. The most productive patterns are simple VC0-1, which also dominate the usage. The analysis has revealed the influence of a root on the structure of other morphemes. The most typical root structure C1-2VC1-2 entails a C1V structure prefix on the one side, while on the other - a suffix or a flexion with VC0-1 structure. The result of such combination is quite a consistent a consonant + a vowel + a consonant (+ a consonant) + a vowel + a consonant (+ a consonant) + a vowel (+ a consonant) chain: C1V + C1-2VC1-2 + VC0-1.
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Olostiak, Martin. "From the modern history of word-formation research in Slovak studies." Juznoslovenski filolog 77, no. 2 (2021): 75–104. http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/jfi2102075o.

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This paper introduces the most important theoretical and methodological works (monographs, studies, and textbooks) that have set the course for word-formation research, especially regarding its methodology, in Slovakia since the latter half of the 20th century, starting with a pioneering monograph by J?n Horeck? entitled Slovotvorn? s?stava slovenciny [Slovak Word-Formation System] (1959), followed by the works of other distinguished scholars (J. Furd?k, K. Buz?ssyov?, M. Sokolov?, ?. Lipt?kov?, M. N?b?lkov?, etc.). Special attention is also paid to the works dealing with the development of word-formation, derivational semantics and onomasiology, word-formation research in relation to other branches of language and linguistics (lexicology and lexicography, morphemics, morphonology, morphology, syntax, theory of the text), as well as to the research focused on compounding.
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Nefedova, Elena A. "North Russian prefix <em>Z-</em>: Between phonetics and morphemics." Voprosy Jazykoznanija, no. 1 (2023): 88. http://dx.doi.org/10.31857/0373-658x.2023.1.88-102.

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The paper discusses the status of the formant z-, represented in the vocabulary of Arkhangelsk dialects of Russian. It mostly occurs on verbs, less often on words of other parts of speech. Consideration of its status concerns several aspects, such as phonetic position, semantics, correlation with synonymous prefixes, and area of usage. The formant z- in Arkhangelsk dialects is used both before obstruents and sonorants and /v-vʲ/. In the process of functioning, it moves from phonetics to morphemics, expanding the range of its meanings and, as a result, acquiring the capability to be used analogically to the prefixes vz-, za-, iz-, s-. The correlation between the semantics of z- and vz- is explained by the phonetic simplifi cation of [vz] before a consonant, whereby the resulting z- inherits all the meanings of vz-. In turn, the prefixes vz-, iz-, za-, s- show semantic commonalities, and this explains the possibility of formations with z- synonymous not only to formations with vz-, but also with iz-, za-, s- in the following meanings: ‘committing an action, bringing an action to the desired limit, result’ — a meaning common with the prefixes vz-, iz-, za-, s-; ‘upward direction of an action or movement’ — a meaning common with the prefixes vz-, za-; ‘starting an action’ — a meaning common with the prefixes vz-, za-; ‘performing a single action’ — a meaning common with the prefix vz-. Thus, the formant z- receives the status of a prefix, synonymous in all meanings to the prefix vz- and partly synonymous to the prefixes iz-, za-, s-. The conclusions about the genesis of the prefix z-, based on the analysis of the material of the Arkhangelsk dialects, are confirmed by the data of dictionaries of other Russian dialects, including those that are not in direct contact with the Belarusian and Ukrainian languages. The results of the study correlate with the problem of the general arealogy of Slavic dialects, aimed at revealing the relations between different languages, which represent their comparability.
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Волков, Валерий Вячеславович, Ирина Владимировна Гладилина, and Людмила Николаевна Скаковская. ", , AND OTHERS. TO THE DIDACTICAL HERMENEUTICS OF THE LINGUISTIC TERMS." Вестник Тверского государственного университета. Серия: Филология, no. 3(74) (September 29, 2022): 101–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.26456/vtfilol/2022.3.101.

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В статье представлены результаты моделирования процессов герменевтического осмысления ключевых терминов лингвистики в учебной работе со студентами-филологами. Предмет учебного лингводидактического анализа - ключевые термины лексической семантики, фонетики и морфемики. Авторы центрируют внимание на способах объяснения и понимания проблем учебного терминоведения, связанных с асимметрией плана выражения и плана содержания таких языковых единиц, как сема, семантика и др., предлагают способы учебной интерпретации ключевых терминов лингвистики на основе актуализации их внутренней формы. The article represents the results of modeling the semantic processes taking place during hermeneutic comprehension of key linguistic terms in academic work with students of philology. The subject of educational linguodidactic analysis is the key terms of lexical semantics, phonetics and morphemics. The authors focus on the ways of explaining and understanding the problems of educational terminology science related to the asymmetry of the plane of content and the plane of expression of such linguistic units as «seme», «semantics», etc., offer ways of educational interpretation of key terms of linguistics based on the actualization of their inner form.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Morphemics"

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Libben, Gary. "Morpheme decomposition and the mental lexicon : evidence from the visual recognition of compounds." Thesis, McGill University, 1987. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=72089.

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This study presents an experimental investigation of morpheme decomposition in the visual recognition of English compounds. It discusses linguistic and psycholinguistic perspectives of the mental lexicon and the role of compound recognition data in the formulation of hypotheses about lexical access and representations.
In a series of three experiments it was found that existing compounds such as "warehouse" appear to be represented in the mental lexicon as morphologically-complex full forms. On the other hand, novel compounds such as "winehouse" appear to be decomposed into their constituent morphemes in the process of word recognition. It was also found that the constraints of English orthography play a significant role in the interpretation of novel compounds. The locus of the orthographic effect, however, appears to be post-lexical.
The results of this study of compound recognition are consistent with a view of the lexicon as a self-reorganizing store of knowledge, which is characterized by cost-free storage and access.
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Palmer, Bill. "Commonality and distinctiveness : towards a theory of morphemics." Thesis, The University of Sydney, 1992. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/1810.

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This work is concerned with the nature of morphemes. It attempts to define and characterise 'morpheme', and provide practical tools for the analysis of morphemes. The work drew its instigation from the practical problems in morphology, in which the phonological and semantic relationships between morphological objects did not parallel the relationships between the roles of those objects in word formation. These relationships are to a large extent not identifiable or describable within the existing approaches to morphology. This work seeks to identify and describe these relationships as the relationships between morphemic entities. In other words, it focuses on morphemes as morphemes, rather than as the atoms of word formation, and seeks to characterise them from that perspective.
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Palmer, Bill. "Commonality and distinctiveness : towards a theory of morphemics." University of Sydney, 1992. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/1810.

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Master of Arts
This work is concerned with the nature of morphemes. It attempts to define and characterise 'morpheme', and provide practical tools for the analysis of morphemes. The work drew its instigation from the practical problems in morphology, in which the phonological and semantic relationships between morphological objects did not parallel the relationships between the roles of those objects in word formation. These relationships are to a large extent not identifiable or describable within the existing approaches to morphology. This work seeks to identify and describe these relationships as the relationships between morphemic entities. In other words, it focuses on morphemes as morphemes, rather than as the atoms of word formation, and seeks to characterise them from that perspective.
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Alforde, Sally. "A comparison of grammatical morpheme usage by four year olds with normal, impaired, and late developing language." PDXScholar, 1992. https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/open_access_etds/4244.

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The purpose of this study was to determine whether language-disordered four-year-old children and those with a history of language delay but currently normal functioning would have acquired a significantly lower percentage of 13 grammatical morphemes than children of the same age with normal language skills. Research has shown that there is a consistency of order in which these morphemes are acquired in children with normal language ability. studies have also shown that while language disordered children acquire these grammatical morphemes in a similar order, the process is slowed down. Language disordered children have difficulty with grammatical morpheme development. Not found in the research is information regarding grammatical morpheme development for children with normal language skills but a history of language delay. Does grammatical morpheme development still pose a problem for these children? Is grammatical morpheme development for this population consistent in terms of order of acquisition with normal and language disordered children? Does acquisition of these morphemes still show deficiencies when language skills have progressed into the normal range? Do patterns of grammatical morpheme development demonstrate distinct features for these children? These are the questions that the present investigation sought to answer.
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Machobane, ʾMalillo. "Some restrictions on the sesotho transitivizing morphemes." Thesis, McGill University, 1989. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=75913.

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This thesis examines the argument structures of applicative and causative verbs in Sesotho, and proposes conditions which they must comply with. It is argued that the two conditions in question are in fact general conditions on argument structure rather than restrictions specific to the individual suffixes. The first, the Thematic Hierarchy Condition, which accounts for the unacceptability of unaccusative verbs and experiencer verbs with a Benefactive argument, follows from a universal tendency to have the highest thematic role as the external argument. The second, the Internal Argument Principle, which accounts for the unacceptability of the applicative and causative suffixes with verbs that take two obligatory internal arguments, follows from the fact that basic verbs across languages take no more than two internal arguments. It is argued that this second principle does not follow from Case Theory or Theta Theory.
This thesis also demonstrates that the distinction between structural and inherent Case plays an important role in morphology. It accounts for certain differences between causatives and applicatives, including the unacceptability of causative verbs with an S$ sp prime$ complement and the order in which the applicative and causative suffixes appear.
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Shirahata, Tomohiko 1957. "The learning of English grammatical morphemes by Japanese high school students." Thesis, The University of Arizona, 1988. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/276802.

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This thesis is a study of the learning of English grammatical morphemes (copula, possessive, ING, plural, progressive auxiliary, irregular-past, regular-past, definite article, indefinite article, and the third-person-singular-present) by 31 Japanese high school students. The data were based on the results of the subjects' spoken language, which were tape-recorded and carefully investigated. The results indicated some similarities and differences between the present study and the previous L1 and L2 studies. The present study showed more similarities to the studies which dealt with Japanese subjects by both the Spearman rank order correlation coefficients and the Implicational Scaling Analysis based on Group Range. This indicates strong transfer from the Japanese language. But language transfer is not such a simple phenomena as the researchers in the Behaviorism era thought. Some methodological problems concerning the grammatical morpheme studies and possible determinants of the accuracy order of the morphemes were also discussed.
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Kwok, Leung Lai-wan Peony, and 郭梁麗蘊. "An analysis of the possible effect of the order of instruction ofEnglish grammatical morphemes on the order of difficulty as derivedfrom written compositions of Chinese adolescent ESL learners." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 1985. http://hub.hku.hk/bib/B31948789.

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Fishley, Katelyn M. "Effects of GO FASTER on Morpheme Definition Fluency of High School Students with High Incidence Disabilities." The Ohio State University, 2011. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1311904390.

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Ishihara, Masahide. "The Morphemic Plane Hypothesis and Plane Internal Phonological Domains." Department of Linguistics, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 1989. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/227236.

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Murawaki, Yuugo. "Automatic Acquisition of Japanese Unknown Morphemes." 京都大学 (Kyoto University), 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/2433/142119.

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Books on the topic "Morphemics"

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Kōtanṭarāman, Pon̲. Tamil morphemics. Madras: Pulamai Publications, 1988.

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Fortineau, Chrystelle, and Stéphane Pagès. Le morphème en question: Exemples multilingues d'analyse submorphologique (anglais, arabe, français, guarani, italien). Aix-en-Provence: Presses universitaires de Provence, 2021.

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Nicholas, Evans. An interesting couple: The semantic development of dyad morphemes. Köln: Institut für Sprachwissenschaft der Universität zu Köln, 2003.

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Qalybaeva, A. Qazīrgī qazaq tīlīnīn͡g︡ morfemalar zhu̇ĭesī. Almaty: Qazaq SSR-īnīn͡g︡ "Ghylym" baspasy, 1986.

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Goverdovskiĭ, V. I. Konnotemnai͡a︡ struktura slova. Kharʹkov: Izd-vo pri Kharʹkovskom gos. universitete izdatelʹskogo obʺedinenii͡a︡ "Vyshcha shkola", 1989.

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Savenkova, E. D. Etrusskai͡a︡ morfemika: Opyt formalʹnogo modelirovanii͡a︡. S.-Peterburg: Izd-vo S.-Peterburgskogo universiteta, 1996.

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Musataeva, M. Sh. Slovarʹ morfem kazakhskogo i︠a︡zyka. Almaty: TOO "Print-S", 2010.

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Kihore, Yared Magori. Sarufi maumbo ya Kiswahili sanifu (SAMAKISA): Sekondari na vyuo. Dar es Salaam: Taasisi ya Uchunguzi wa Kiswahili, Chuo Kikuu cha Dar es Salaam, 2003.

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Rusak, V. P. Marfanalohii︠a︡ suchasnaĭ belaruskaĭ movy. Minsk: Belaruskai︠a︡ navuka, 2003.

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Bang, Jørgen Chr. Flexiver som relatorer: En beskrivelse & bestemmelse af nogle dynamiske træk ved dankse ord. [Odense]: Center for nordiske studier, Forskergruppen for økologi, sprog & ideologi, Odense universitet, 1995.

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Book chapters on the topic "Morphemics"

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Vinogradov, Viktor A. "Historical morphemics aand unit-order typology." In Language Typology 1987, 115. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/cilt.67.08vin.

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Hammond, Michael. "Morphemic circumscription." In Yearbook of Morphology, 195–209. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-011-2516-1_12.

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Macy, Kelly, Wouter Staal, Cate Kraper, Amanda Steiner, Trina D. Spencer, Lydia Kruse, Marina Azimova, et al. "Bound Morphemes." In Encyclopedia of Autism Spectrum Disorders, 468. New York, NY: Springer New York, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4419-1698-3_100224.

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Scahill, Lawrence David, Koorosh Kooros, Ramon Barinaga, Rechele Brooks, Marisela Huerta, Lindsey Sterling, Jeffrey J. Wood, et al. "Grammatical Morphemes." In Encyclopedia of Autism Spectrum Disorders, 1456. New York, NY: Springer New York, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4419-1698-3_100648.

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Katamba, Francis. "Types of Morphemes." In Morphology, 41–64. London: Macmillan Education UK, 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-22851-5_3.

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Hausser, Roland. "Words and Morphemes." In Foundations of Computational Linguistics, 249–67. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-41431-2_13.

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Hausser, Roland. "Words and morphemes." In Foundations of Computational Linguistics, 241–58. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-04337-0_14.

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Bryant, Peter, Terezinha Nunes, and Miriam Bindman. "Morphemes and Spelling." In Learning to Read: An Integrated View from Research and Practice, 15–41. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-011-4826-9_2.

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Hausser, Roland. "Words and morphemes." In Foundations of Computational Linguistics, 241–58. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-03920-5_14.

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Katarmba, Francis, and John Stonham. "Types of Morphemes." In Morphology, 42–66. London: Macmillan Education UK, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-137-11131-9_3.

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Conference papers on the topic "Morphemics"

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Kalimeris, Constandinos, and Stelios Bakamidis. "MORPHEMIA: a semi-supervised algorithm for the segmentation of Modern Greek words into morphemes." In 2nd Tutorial and Research Workshop on Experimental Linguistics. ExLing Society, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.36505/exling-2008/02/0030/000089.

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Creutz, Mathias, and Krista Lagus. "Unsupervised discovery of morphemes." In the ACL-02 workshop. Morristown, NJ, USA: Association for Computational Linguistics, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.3115/1118647.1118650.

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Koktová, Eva. "Towards a new type of morphemic analysis." In the second conference. Morristown, NJ, USA: Association for Computational Linguistics, 1985. http://dx.doi.org/10.3115/976931.976957.

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Opamin, Keven. "A Morphological Analysis of the Sinama Variety in Iligan City, Philippines." In GLOCAL Conference on Asian Linguistic Anthropology 2022. The GLOCAL Unit, SOAS University of London, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.47298/cala2022.3-1.

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The Sinama languages are spoken mostly in the Sulu Archipelago, in the Philippines, in Sabah, Malaysia, and in Eastern Indonesia. These languages are also known as 'Bajau' or 'Sama-Bajau,' particularly in linguistics literature. As such, the Bajau, also known as the Sama, are a culturally and linguistically diverse people who live primarily in the southern central Philippines and in eastern regions of Indonesia and Malaysia. I interviewed women from the Bajau community to investigate the morphology of Binajau­ Tambacan, spoken in Barangay Tambacan, Iligan City. I divided the morphological analysis into two parts; identifying morphemes and investigating morphological processes. As such, we classify the Sinama dialect of Binajau Tambacan in various respects. The data set contains 195 Binajau Tambacan morphemes, which includes 138 lexical morphemes, 20 grammatical/functional morphemes, and seven bound morphemes. The findings indicate that a variety of morphological processes appear in the Binajau Tambacan. These are; affixations, reduplication, borrowing, and indigenization. Furthermore, the results also indicate that Binajau Tambacan, spoken by the Bajau women, has the highest similarity to Central Sinama, at 82%. This lends credence to the notion that it is most likely classified as Central Sinama.
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Sekova, Iuliia Aleksandrovna. "Morphological changes on morphemic sutures of Yakut nouns." In III International Scientific and Practical Conference. TSNS Interaktiv Plus, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.21661/r-464703.

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Arabsorkhi, Mohsen, and Mehrnoush Shamsfard. "Unsupervised discovery of Persian morphemes." In the Eleventh Conference of the European Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics: Posters & Demonstrations. Morristown, NJ, USA: Association for Computational Linguistics, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.3115/1608974.1609002.

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Neuvel, Sylvain, and Sean A. Fulop. "Unsupervised learning of morphology without morphemes." In the ACL-02 workshop. Morristown, NJ, USA: Association for Computational Linguistics, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.3115/1118647.1118651.

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Tatevosov, S. G., and X. L. Kisseleva. "SEMANTICS FOR OBRATNO: A RE-ENTRY INTO A DISCONTINUED STATE." In International Conference on Computational Linguistics and Intellectual Technologies "Dialogue". Russian State University for the Humanities, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.28995/2075-7182-2020-19-708-723.

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This paper explores the meaning and distribution of obratno, one of the Russian repetitive and restitutive morphemes. We identify three essential characteristics of obratno: obligatoriness of the restitutive reading, narrow scope with respect of indefinites, and incompatibility with eventuality descriptions that entail a result state in the sense of [Kratzer 2000]. We argue that like garden-variety repetitive and restitutive morphemes (e.g., Russian opjat’), obratno denotes a partial identity function with a presupposition. Unlike such morphemes, however, the presuppositional content of obratno involves a return to the same state in which an entity had been before. We capture this characteristic relying on [Landman’s 2008] notion of crosstemporal identity of eventualities and the derivative notion of a cross-temporal substate. This makes the repetitive reading of obratno unavailable, forces identity of the holders of a state, deriving the narrow scope effect, and guarantees that obratno is only compatible with target state descriptions.
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Üstün, Ahmet, Murathan Kurfalı, and Burcu Can. "Characters or Morphemes: How to Represent Words?" In Proceedings of The Third Workshop on Representation Learning for NLP. Stroudsburg, PA, USA: Association for Computational Linguistics, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.18653/v1/w18-3019.

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Levit, M., A. L. Gorin, and J. H. Wright. "Multipass algorithm for acquisition of salient acoustic morphemes." In 7th European Conference on Speech Communication and Technology (Eurospeech 2001). ISCA: ISCA, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.21437/eurospeech.2001-203.

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