Defectiveness in Morphology
Defectiveness in Morphology
- Antonio FábregasAntonio FábregasInstitute of Language and Culture, University of Tromsø-Norway's Arctic University
Summary
Morphological defectiveness refers to situations where one or more paradigmatic forms of a lexeme are not realized, without plausible syntactic, semantic, or phonological causes. The phenomenon tends to be associated with low-frequency lexemes and loanwords. Typically, defectiveness is gradient, lexeme-specific, and sensitive to the internal structure of paradigms.
The existence of defectiveness is a challenge to acquisition models and morphological theories where there are elsewhere operations to materialize items. For this reason, defectiveness has become a rich field of research in recent years, with distinct approaches that view it as an item-specific idiosyncrasy, as an epiphenomenal result of rule competition, or as a normal morphological alternation within a paradigmatic space.
Keywords
Subjects
- Cognitive Science
- Morphology
- Phonetics/Phonology
- Psycholinguistics