2018
DOI: 10.1163/18776930-01002002
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On the morphophonology of domains in Somali verbs and nouns

Abstract: Morphemes involved in the formation of Somali verbs and nouns are, in most instances, clearly individuated into categories corresponding to their role in word formation. Verbs contain a base, derivational extensions, inflectional affixes, and clitics that attach in a fixed order. Nouns also contain a base and derivational affixes, but little inflectional morphology. Indeed, both parts of speech have similar morphological templates in Somali, but the relationship between the language’s morphological domains and… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…The fact that MRK can realize its effects, both segmentally and tonally, even on verbs in circumstances like these, leads to another possible extension of our analysis, namely the predictions that it makes concerning the composition of VIs and the status of H tone in Somali's verbal system. As pointed out by Green & Morrison (2018), several structural parallels exist between Somali nouns and verbs, such as the ability of the vast majority of derivational suffixes to attract H tone while subsequently witnessing loss of H on a stem, but also the presence of just a few suffixes that fail to do so.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The fact that MRK can realize its effects, both segmentally and tonally, even on verbs in circumstances like these, leads to another possible extension of our analysis, namely the predictions that it makes concerning the composition of VIs and the status of H tone in Somali's verbal system. As pointed out by Green & Morrison (2018), several structural parallels exist between Somali nouns and verbs, such as the ability of the vast majority of derivational suffixes to attract H tone while subsequently witnessing loss of H on a stem, but also the presence of just a few suffixes that fail to do so.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The main difference between them is structural; these suffixes subcategorize for parsing within a prosodic word with the stem that they modify. Other affixal elements in the Somali, and notably inflectional suffixes and clitics, exhibit markedly distinct tonal and segmental characteristics, suggesting that they have different subcategorization requirements; see Green & Morrison (2018) for more discussion of their properties. The denominalizer VI for suffix -iyad is shown in ( 23).…”
Section: Nominal Derivatives and Pluralsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In viewing a Somali corpus, one might have the impression that Somali words are quite large. This is misleading, however, due in part to the synthetic nature of the language's lexicon, particularly its verbs, but also because the orthography treats oftentimes complex phrases as single written words (Green & Morrison 2018). Upon closer inspection, one finds an abundance of smaller words, with a robust minimality requirement on word size, as illustrated below.…”
Section: Minimal Word Size and Shapementioning
confidence: 99%