Chapter
2.3. Variability in the meaning of compounds
pp.:
26 – 27
2.4. Absolute exceptions
pp.:
27 – 28
1. The Lexicalist Hypothesis (Chomsky 1970)
pp.:
31 – 34
Chapter II: Lexicalist morphology
pp.:
31 – 31
1.1. Consequences for derivation
pp.:
34 – 36
1.2. Word stress rules
pp.:
36 – 37
2. Prolegomena to a theory of word formation (Halle 1973)
pp.:
37 – 38
2.1. The model
pp.:
38 – 45
2.2. Relevance of Halle’s theory
pp.:
45 – 46
2.3. Some criticisms of Halle’s model
pp.:
46 – 48
1. Morphemes and words
pp.:
51 – 54
Chapter III: Word formation in generative morphology
pp.:
51 – 51
1.2. Goals of a morphological theory
pp.:
54 – 56
1.1. The Word Based Hypothesis
pp.:
54 – 54
2. Word Formation Rules
pp.:
56 – 58
3. Restrictions on Word Formation Rules
pp.:
58 – 58
3.1. The base
pp.:
58 – 65
3.2. The output
pp.:
65 – 68
Chapter IV: Readjustment rules
pp.:
71 – 71
1. Readjustment Rules
pp.:
71 – 72
1.1. Truncation Rules
pp.:
72 – 74
1.2. Allomorphy Rules
pp.:
74 – 75
2. Justification of Readjustment Rules
pp.:
75 – 77
2.1. Readjustment Rules and Word Formation Rules
pp.:
77 – 80
2.2. Readjustment Rules and Phonological Rules
pp.:
80 – 81
1. Words and stems
pp.:
85 – 89
Chapter V: Lexical formatives and word formation rules
pp.:
85 – 85
1.1. Learned stems
pp.:
89 – 90
2. Representation
pp.:
90 – 90
2.1. External Boundaries
pp.:
90 – 92
2.2. Formatives of the lexical component
pp.:
92 – 95
2.3. Class I and Class II Affixes
pp.:
95 – 104
3. Compounding
pp.:
104 – 104
3.1. The Variable R Condition
pp.:
104 – 106
3.2. The “IS A” Condition
pp.:
106 – 107
3.3. Boundaries in compounds and the Extended Level Ordering Hypothesis
pp.:
107 – 109
4. Well formedness conditions
pp.:
109 – 111
5. Summary
pp.:
111 – 115
1. Strong Lexicalist Hypothesis
pp.:
115 – 116
Chapter VI: Interplay between morphological rules
pp.:
115 – 115
2. Derivation and Inflection
pp.:
116 – 129
3. Compounding and Derivation
pp.:
129 – 130
3.1. The Extended Ordering Hypothesis in English
pp.:
130 – 133
3.2. The Extended Ordering Hypothesis in Italian
pp.:
133 – 136
4. Compounding and Inflection
pp.:
136 – 141
5. Some bordeline cases
pp.:
141 – 141
5.1. The Past Participle
pp.:
141 – 145
5.2. Evaluative Suffixes
pp.:
145 – 147
6. Summary
pp.:
147 – 151
1. The Unitary Base Hypothesis
pp.:
151 – 152
Chapter VII: Constraining word formation rules
pp.:
151 – 151
1.1. The Modified Unitary Base Hypothesis
pp.:
152 – 154
1.2. N, V, A + suffix
pp.:
154 – 155
1.3. N, V + ata
pp.:
155 – 157
1.4. N, V + ino
pp.:
157 – 158
1.5. One suffix or two?
pp.:
158 – 160
2. The Binary Branching Hypothesis
pp.:
160 – 161
2.1. Parasynthetics
pp.:
161 – 164
2.2. The suffix -istico
pp.:
164 – 165
3. The Ordering Hypothesis
pp.:
165 – 168
4. The No Phrase Constraint
pp.:
168 – 170
5. Blocking
pp.:
170 – 171
5.1. Productivity
pp.:
171 – 172
5.2. Blocking and the Blocking Rule
pp.:
172 – 177
6. Summary
pp.:
177 – 181
Chapter VIII: Morphology and syntax
pp.:
181 – 181
1. Word Formation Rules and Transformations
pp.:
181 – 183
1.1. Locality
pp.:
183 – 192
1.2. Subcategorization Frames
pp.:
192 – 197
2. Clitics
pp.:
197 – 199
3. Interaction between Morphology and Syntax
pp.:
199 – 200
3.1. Word Bar Theory
pp.:
200 – 205
3.2. Inflection
pp.:
205 – 211
4. Summary and conclusions
pp.:
211 – 215
Symbols and Abbreviations
pp.:
215 – 219
Subject Index
pp.:
219 – 225
Affix Index
pp.:
225 – 229
Word Index
pp.:
229 – 245
Index of Names
pp.:
245 – 247
Bibliography
pp.:
247 – 253