Title: Pre- and Protomorphology
Subtitle: Early Phases of Morphological Development in Nouns and Verbs
Series Title: LINCOM Studies in Theoretical Linguistics 29
Editor: Maria D. Voeikova
Editor: Wolfgang U Dressler
Paperback: ISBN: 3895864684 Pages: 200 Price: Europe EURO 69
Abstract:
This volume presents the intermediate results of the international
"Crosslinguistic Project on Pre- and Protomorphology in Language
Acquisition" co-ordinated by Wolfgang U. Dressler in behalf of the Austrian
Academy of Sciences. It continues the series of publications started with
Dressler & Karpf 1995, Dressler 1997, Dziubalska-Kolaczyk 1997, Gillis
1998, Bittner, Dressler and Kilani-Schoch 2000 as well as individual
publications of the project participants. About the project - take the
introduction from Dressler (manuscript for San Sebastian).
The book includes several introductory chapters (Dressler & Kilani-Schoch,
Stephany, Voeikova) written by the project co-ordinators on the base of the
written reports of participants and several studies on the acquisition of
noun and verb morphology in the transitory phase from pre- to
protomorphology (for definitions see Bittner, Dressler and Kilani-Schoch
2000: 3 ff.) and in the protomorphological phase in eight languages
(German, Finnish, French, Yucatec Maya, Italian, Lithuanian, Russian and
Spanish).
Both inflectional and derivational morphology is observed in nouns,
including such topics as compounding, diminutive formation, case and number
distinctions. Verbs are described from the point of view of inflectional
morphology and agreement.
Case vs. number and person - heterogeneous. Number and person -
crosslinguistically - the difference is in the type of marking and shape
(more patterns, inflectional classes etc. vs. phonological harmony). The
set of forms is comparable.
Case - the set of forms is hardly comparable without grouping. Big number
of forms in the paradigm does not aggravate their acquisition if there are
no inflectional classes. On the other hand, small number of distinct
inflectional forms, analytical marking, other means to express case
distinctions may slow the process.
Table of contents:
Maria Voeikova (Saint Petersburg, Vienna) & Wolfgang U. Dressler (Vienna):
Introduction
Ursula Stephany (Cologne): Early development of grammatical number - a
typological perspective
Maria Voeikova (Saint Petersburg, Vienna): The acquisition of case in
typologically different languages
Marianne Kilani-Schoch (Lausanne) & Wolfgang U. Dressler (Vienna): The
emergence of inflectional paradigms in two French corpora: an illustration
of general problems of pre- and protomorphology
Sabine Klampfer & Katharina Korecky-Kröll (Vienna): Nouns and verbs at the
transition from pre- to protomorphology: a longitudinal case study on
Austrian German
Barbara Pfeiler (Merida): Noun and verb acquisition in Yucatec Maya.
Klaus Laalo (Tampere): Acquisition of case in Finnish: a preliminary
overview...
Ineta Savickiene (Kaunas): The emergence of case distinctions in Lithuanian
Maria Voeikova (Saint Petersburg, Vienna) & Natalia Gagarina (Berlin):
Early syntax, first lexicon and the acquisition of case forms by two
Russian children
Anna de Marco (Cosenza): The development of diminutives in Italian: input
and acquisition
Victoria Marrero (Madrid), María José Albalá (Madrid) & Ignacio Moreno
(Málaga): Use of diminutives by children and adults in Spanish. A
preliminary analysis
Carmen Aguirre (Vienna): The acquisition of tense and aspect morphology: a
key for semantic interpretation
Zrinka Jelaska, Melita Kovacevic & Maja Andel (Zagreb): Morphology and
semantics - the basis of Croatian case
Authors' page
Linguistic Field(s): Historical Linguistics
Morphology