“…Most previous studies have examined English (e.g. Alegre & Gordon, 1996;Berent & Pinker, 2007;Buck-Gengler, Menn & Healy, 2004;Clahsen & Almazan, 2001;Cunnings & Clahsen, 2007;Fiorentino, Bost, Abel & Zuccarelli, 2012;Gordon, 1985;Grodner, Gibson & Tunstall, 2002;Haskell, MacDonald & Seidenberg, 2003;Jaensch, Heyer, Gordon & Clahsen, 2014;Oetting & Rice, 1993;Ramscar & Dye, 2010;Silva, Gerth & Clahsen, 2013;van der Lely & Christian, 2000;Zukowski, 2005). The plurals-in-compounds effect is the result of a number of general constraints on word-formation and inflectional processes, which can be found in many languages.…”