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Lista de candidatos sometidos a examen:
1) derivational (*)
(*) Términos presentes en el nuestro glosario de lingüística

1) Candidate: derivational


Is in goldstandard

1
paper CL_LiteraturayLingüísticatxt168 - : In this article, we focus on nominalizations, which are an important lexical resource used in written specialized discourse. Our purpose is to describe the occurrence and syntactic functions of nominalizations identified by derivational suffixes in a corpus of technical manuals belonging to three different areas of specialization: maritime, industrial and commerce . By means of computational tools following corpus linguistic methodologies, nominalizations occurring specifically in each area were determined. Through this process, we intend to identify lexical units with a specialized meaning, belonging to specialized vocabulary of each area of knowledge. The results confirm the idea that the comparatively relevant presence of nominalizations is a prototypical feature of technical discourse. Concerning the derivational suffixes, the evidence provided confirms the high occurrence of the suffixes –ción/-sión in all the three areas. The most common syntactic function is as head of nominal group

Evaluando al candidato derivational:


1) nominalizations: 4 (*)
2) specialized: 3 (*)
3) suffixes: 3

derivational
Lengua:
Frec: 37
Docs: 28
Nombre propio: / 37 = 0%
Coocurrencias con glosario: 2
Puntaje: 2.714 = (2 + (1+3.4594316186373) / (1+5.24792751344359)));
Candidato aceptado

Referencias bibliográficas encontradas sobre cada término

(Que existan referencias dedicadas a un término es también indicio de terminologicidad.)
derivational
: Alotaibi, M. A. & Alotaibi, A. M. (2017). On the Acquisition of Derivational Suffixes by Kuwaiti EFL Learners. European Scientific Journal, ESJ, 13(17), 223-238.
: Auza, A. & Roldán, M. (2003). Derivational Morphology Deficits in Mexican Children with SLI. Trabajo presentado en el Congreso de American Speech and Hearing Association. nov. 14 al 16, Chicago - IL, USA. ASHA.
: Benavides, C. (2014). Lexicalization and Spanish derivational morphology. Research in Corpus Linguistics, 2, 1-14. Doi: 10.32714/ricl.02.01.
: Bertram, R., Laine, M. & Virkkala, M.M. (2000). The role of derivational morphology in vocabulary acquisition: Get by with little help from my morpheme friends. Scandinavian Journal of Psychology, 41, 287-296.
: Duncan, L., Casalis, S. & Colé, P. (2008). Early metalinguistic awareness of derivational morphology: Observations from a comparison of English and French. Applied Psycholinguistics, 30, 405-440.
: Hoopman, Hilda y Dominique Sportiche. 1989. Spanish Word Formation. Productive Derivational Morphology in the Modern Lexis. Londres; Nueva York: Routledge.
: Kieffer, M. & Lesaux, N. (2008). The role of derivational morphology in the reading comprehension of Spanish-speaking English language learners. Reading and Writing, 21, 783-804.
: Laws, J.V. & C. Ryder (2014). Getting the Measure of Derivational Morphology in Adult Speech: A Corpus Analysis Using Morpho Quantics. Language Studies Working Papers, 6, 3-17.
: López, L. (2009). A derivational syntax for information structure. Oxford: Oxford University Press .
: Miceli, G. & Caramazza, A. (1988). Dissociation of inflectional and derivational morphology. Brain and Language, 35, 24-65.
: Ravid, D. (2004). Derivational morphology revisited: Later lexical development in Hebrew. En R. Berman (Ed.), Language development across childhood and adolescence (pp. 53-82). John Benjamin's Publishers.
: Tyler, A. & Nagy, W (1989). The Acquisition of English Derivational Morphology. Journal of Memory and Language, 28(6), 649-667.
: [167]López[168], Luis. 2009. A Derivational Syntax for Information Structure. Oxford, Oxford University Press.
: van Hout, A. & Roeper, T. (1998). Events and aspectual structure in derivational morphology. MIT Working papers in linguistics 32, 175-220.