Olivier Bonami and Gilles Boyé: Deriving Inflectional Irregularity
Conventional wisdom holds that productive morphology is regular
morphology. Drawing evidence from French, we argue that the description of many
lexeme formation processes is simplified if we hold that a productive rule may
give rise to inflectionally irregular lexemes. We argue that the notion of a
stem space allows for a straightforward description of this phenomenon:
each lexeme comes equipped with a vector of possibly distinct stems, which
serve as bases for inflectional form construction. The stem space is structured
by default relations which encode the regular pattern of inflection; (partial)
irregularities occur when a lexeme specifies a stem space violating the default
relations. Derived irregularity is then the effect of a productive lexeme
formation rule which specifies an irregular stem space for its output.
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Created: October 14, 2006
Last modified: March 10, 2008
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