2013
DOI: 10.4314/ujah.v13i2.10
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Compounding in Igala: Defining Criteria, Forms and Functions

Abstract: In spite of the fact that compounding is really pervasive in the world's languages and despite the huge volume of literatures on compounding in languages including African languages, a critical assessment of the extant literature on compounding in African linguistics reveals that providing satisfactory criteria for defining compoundhood still requires both language specific and cross-linguistic investigations for dependable linguistic generalizations. In Ígálà, in particular, not much attention has been devote… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
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“…The premise on which this process is considered a nominalisation process is that the derived nominal is different from the two nouns that are merged to form the nominal. I base this notion on the idea developed by Omachonu & Abraham (2012), which claims that the nominals derived by compounding are different from any of the two nouns that are merged to derive the nominal. In furtherance of this, I claim in this study that due to the endocentric nature of the derived nominal, one of the merged nouns acts as the nominaliser of the other noun.…”
Section: Parallel Analysis Of the Head In Yorùbá Nominalisation Processesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The premise on which this process is considered a nominalisation process is that the derived nominal is different from the two nouns that are merged to form the nominal. I base this notion on the idea developed by Omachonu & Abraham (2012), which claims that the nominals derived by compounding are different from any of the two nouns that are merged to derive the nominal. In furtherance of this, I claim in this study that due to the endocentric nature of the derived nominal, one of the merged nouns acts as the nominaliser of the other noun.…”
Section: Parallel Analysis Of the Head In Yorùbá Nominalisation Processesmentioning
confidence: 99%