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Hualde, Jose Ignacio – Language Sciences, 2009
In this paper, I examine the prosodic nature of unstressed function words in Spanish. I defend the hypothesis that these words, like all other words in the language, have a syllable that is lexically designated as stressed. I suggest that the essential property of these words is that they are subject to a rule of prosodic merger with following…
Descriptors: Morphemes, Phonology, Spanish, Syllables
Sharifian, Farzad; Lotfi, Ahmad R. – Language Sciences, 2007
Most linguistic studies of subject-verb agreement have thus far attempted to account for this phenomenon in terms of either syntax or semantics. Kim (2004) [Kim, J., 2004. Hybrid agreement in English. Linguistics 42 (6), 1105-1128] proposes a "hybrid analysis", which allows for a morphosyntactic agreement and a semantic agreement within the same…
Descriptors: Semantics, Verbs, Syntax, Linguistics

Kerek, Andrew – Language Sciences, 1971
Earlier version of the paper was read at the Kentucky Foreign Language Conference, Lexington, Kentucky, April 1971. (VM)
Descriptors: Descriptive Linguistics, Grammar, Hungarian, Morphemes

Sullivan, William J. – Language Sciences, 1977
Discusses a stratificational view of the lexicon by (1) defining the transformational-generative lexicon; (2) considering some undesirable consequences of the lexicon; and (3) showing the stratificational model to be simpler and more complete than the transformational-generative version. (CHK)
Descriptors: Lexicology, Linguistic Theory, Models, Morphemes

Newmeyer, Frederick J. – Language Sciences, 2001
Grammaticalization is often regarded in the literature as a distinct process requiring explanatory machinery unique to its own domain. Argues, on the contrary, that grammaticalization is simply a cover term for certain syntactic, semantic, and phonetic changes, all of which apply independently of each other. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Diachronic Linguistics, Grammar, Morphemes, Phonetics