Termout.org logo/LING


Update: February 24, 2023 The new version of Termout.org is now online, so this web site is now obsolete and will soon be dismantled.

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

1) Candidate: inflectional


Is in goldstandard

1
paper CO_FormayFuncióntxt292 - : In this paper, I explore some morphological aspects observed in Tenango Otomi (Oto-Manguean > Oto-Pamean > Otomi) verbal inflection: on the one hand, the fact that verbs can be grouped into different inflectional classes according to three criteria: (1 ) the TAM/person markers they select, (2) initial consonant mutations (if any), and (3) tone alternations in the verb stem. On the other hand, I explore correlations between the inflectional classes resulting from these three criteria. Furthermore, I discuss the possibility that this system of verb conjugations (according to the TAM/person mark criterion) is more adequately described as a system of segregated inflectional classes.

2
paper CO_FormayFuncióntxt288 - : Nouns are an open class in Kamsá. Prototypical members of this class head noun phrases and typically function as arguments of the clause. Unlike verbs, nouns can regularly appear bare in the clause, without any inflectional morphology. Nouns can bear inflectional morphology, although a noun can be a word without any bound morphemes. The inflectional morphology includes: number marking (plural and dual ), noun class markers, a topic marker, and a determiner that is a clitic preceding the noun. Kamsá has derivational morphology, including suffixes to make an agent from a verb and evaluatives (diminutives, augmentatives, and pejoratives). Kamsá nouns that are derived from verbs also lack morphology, i.e. they are stripped of the morphology of the verb, but then receive the derivational suffix. The following two examples show pairs of verb infinitives and their corresponding agentive nouns.

3
paper CO_Íkalatxt136 - : Assessing the so Called Marked Inflectional Features of Nigerian English: A Second Language Acquisition Theory Account by Boluwaji Oshodi is the first empirical study . In this article, Dr. Oshodi compares the oral and written productions of Nigerian and Malaysian students to demonstrate that the '' so called marked inflectional features of Nigerian English '' are consequences of the problems with lexical retrieval, which are common among L2 English speakers, rather than particular variations of the English language spoken in Nigeria according to Kirkpatrick (2011).

4
paper CO_Íkalatxt137 - : ASSESSING THE SO CALLED MARKED INFLECTIONAL FEATURES OF NIGERIAN ENGLISH: A SECOND LANGUAGE ACQUISITION THEORY ACCOUNT

5
paper PE_Lexistxt109 - : ^2La regla de este fenómeno fonológico es explicada por Payne: “The short -a becomes tense when it is not in a weak word, and is followed by a front nasal (e.g., man, ham, hand), or a front voiceless fricative (e.g., glass, laugh, path), and this is followed by either an inflectional boundary or another consonant” (Payne 1980: 15 ).

6
paper corpusSignostxt313 - : Integration of nominal Anglicisms to the rich Romanian inflectional system entails the use of nominal classifiers like enclitic determiners: tunerul, printerul, software-ul^[31]7 (soft-ul), proclitic determiners: un / niste ploter(e ), folder(e), inflectional affixes, i.e. plural morphemes like -e or -uri: servere, foldere, audituri, laptopuri, display-uri, holdinguri, trenduri, or case markers: holdingului, a unui manager.

7
paper corpusSignostxt313 - : Verbs are often created from English verbs or nouns using Romanian verbal classifiers, like derivative suffixes: -a: forcasta (cf. forecast), targheta^[32]8 (cf. target), printa (cf. print); -iza: sponsoriza (cf. sponsor), globaliza (cf. global / globalize), computeriza (cf. computer / computerise), -ui^[33]9: a brandui (cf. brand), a bipui (cf. the interjection bip), a chatui (cf. chat), a serui (cf. share), a zipui (cf. zip) or inflectional suffixes: downloadati fisierul [download the file]: femeia care îl body-guard-eaza pe N . [the woman that *body-guards N.] (GALR, 2005). The affix-(a)re is specialized for abstract nouns, and is used as a means of completing the lexical family of the loanword: auditare, forcastare, printare, targhetare, etc.

Evaluando al candidato inflectional:


2) nouns: 6 (*)
3) verb: 5 (*)
4) morphology: 5 (*)
5) verbs: 5 (*)
6) nigerian: 4
11) suffixes: 3
14) markers: 3 (*)
16) marked: 3
17) noun: 3 (*)

inflectional
Lengua: eng
Frec: 61
Docs: 30
Nombre propio: / 61 = 0%
Coocurrencias con glosario: 6
Puntaje: 6.898 = (6 + (1+5.24792751344359) / (1+5.95419631038688)));
Candidato aceptado

Referencias bibliográficas encontradas sobre cada término

(Que existan referencias dedicadas a un término es también indicio de terminologicidad.)
inflectional
: 3. Clahsen, Harald y Monika Rothweiler. 1992. Inflectional rules in children´s grammars: Evidence from German participles. Yearbook of Morphology 5. 1-34.
: Aronoff, M. (1994). Morphology by Itself. Stems and Inflectional Classes. The MIT Press.
: Ciucci, L. (2016). Inflectional morphology in the Zamucoan languages. CEADUC.
: Hernández-Green, N. (2019). Inflectional Verb Classes in Acazulco Otomi. Amérindia, 41, 279-328.
: How to reference this article: Oshodi, B. (2014). Assessing the so Called Marked Inflectional Features of Nigerian English: A Second Language Acquisition Theory Account. Íkala, Revista de Lenguaje y Cultura, 19(1), 15-26.
: Kurylowicz, J. (1964), The inflectional categories of Indo-European, Heidelberg, Winter.
: Manney, Linda Joyce. 2000. Middle voice in Modern Greek: Meaning and function of an inflectional category, Amsterdam, John Benjamins .
: Mel’čuk, Igor. 1993. The inflectional category of voice: towards a more rigorous definition, en Bernard Comrie y Maria Polinsky (eds.), Causatives and transitivity, Amsterdam, John Benjamins : 1-46.
: Miceli, G. & Caramazza, A. (1988). Dissociation of inflectional and derivational morphology. Brain and Language, 35, 24-65.
: Palancar, E., & Avelino, H. (2019). Inflectional complexity and verb classes in Chichimec. Amérindia, 41, 323-359.
: Slabakova, R. (2018). Inflectional Morphology. En P. A. Malovrh & A. G. Benati (Eds.), The Handbook of Advanced Proficiency in Second Language Acquisition (pp. 381-400). Oxford: John Wiley .
: Stump, G. T. (2016). Inflectional paradigms. Content and form at the syntax-morphology interface. Cambridge University Press. [206]https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9781316105290
: White, L. (2003). Fossilization in steady state L2 grammars: Persistent problems with inflectional morphology. Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 6(2), 129- 141.
: Wilson, S., et al. (2014). Inflectional morphology in primary progressive aphasia: An elicited production study. Brain and Language , 136, 58-68. doi: 10.1016/j.bandl.2014.07.001
: Wood, H., Gelfand, M., Sanz, C. & Ullman, M. (2010). Verbal Inflectional Morphology in L1 and L2 Spanish: A Frequency Effects Study Examining Storage versus Composition. Language Learning, 60(1), 44-87. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-9922.2009.00551.x
: [62]White, Lydia. 2003a. Fossilization at the steady state: Persistent problems with inflectional morphology, Bilingualism: Language and cognition, 2, 6: 129-141.
: ___________. (1985). Inflectional Morphology. En Shopen, T. (Ed.) Language typology and syntactic description, 3 (pp.150-201). Cambridge, Cambridge: U. Press.