The Competition Between Overt Suffixation and Zero-Affixation in Present-Day English Nominalisation
Cristina Lara-Clares author Alexander Brock editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Peter Lang AG
Published:26th Aug '25
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

In linguistic morphology, competition is expected to be resolved, on the grounds that it is not economical for a system to keep two or more processes for one purpose. This volume researches overt suffixation and zero‑affixation for the nominalisation of the semantic categories action, agentive, instrument and state aiming at hints of resolution, diachronically and in present‑day English, using both lexicographic and corpus sources. Specifically, the book explores resolution in terms of specialisation regarding mode, register, and meaning. To this aim, (i) the frequency of use of each semantic category is computed for every competitor, (ii) statistical analysis is performed to test association between mode or register and word‑formation process and (iii) semantic specialisation is explored in individual groups of competition.
The results enlarge on the claim that competition may take place to varying degrees and prove that it needs to be researched at the level of the semantic category.
ISBN: 9783631930632
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 354g
216 pages
New edition