-
Nonconcatenative morphology, also
called discontinuous morphology and introflection, is a form of word
formation and
inflection in
which the root is modified...
-
Optimality Theory, to morphology, in
particular to
solve the
problem of
nonconcatenative morphology in
Semitic languages. HHe
completed his A.B. in linguistics...
- i.e.
method of
constructing words from a
basic root.
Arabic has a
nonconcatenative "root-and-pattern" morphology: A root
consists of a set of bare consonants...
-
Broken plural Indo-European
ablaut Khuzdul K-T-B
Modern Hebrew grammar Nonconcatenative morphology Phono-semantic
matching Proto-Indo-European root Š-L-M Transfix...
- of the
European Union. The
Semitic languages are
notable for
their nonconcatenative morphology. That is, word
roots are not
themselves syllables or words...
- p****ive or
causative action.
Semitic languages make
extensive use of
nonconcatenative morphology, and most
words share a set of two,
three or four consonants...
- languages,
including Hebrew, Arabic, and Amharic.
These also
often involve nonconcatenative morphology, in
which a word root is
often placed into
templates denoting...
-
vowel ablaut along with
prefixation (ak-) and
infixation (-'-): The
nonconcatenative morphology of the
Afroasiatic languages is
sometimes described in terms...
-
account of
vowel and
consonant slots on a
central timing tier (see also
nonconcatenative morphology). The
autosegmental formalism departs from the depiction...
- catenulate, chain, concatenate, concatenation, enchain, enchaînement,
nonconcatenative †catēnula catēnul-
cauda caud-, cod- tail cauda, caudal, caudate, caudicle...