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Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter Mouton August 11, 2006

Case stacking in realizational morphology

  • Louisa Sadler EMAIL logo and Rachel Nordlinger
From the journal Linguistics

Abstract

Case stacking, the phenomenon whereby a single word may bear multiple cases reflecting its relation to a number of different syntactic elements, is an important phenomenon both for the development of theories of inflectional morphology and for our understanding of the relation between morphology and syntax. However, to date it has received virtually no attention from theoretical morphology. Working within the inferential-realizational framework of paradigm function morphology (PFM), we provide a morphological analysis of the phenomenon of case stacking as found in the Australian Aboriginal languages Kayardild (Tangkic) and Martuthunira (Pama-Nyungan). We argue that the standard assumptions concerning morphological property sets in PFM are too weak to satisfactorily accommodate case stacking morphology, and we propose that (in some languages) the morphological property sets which define paradigm cells are structured rather than being the simple objects of the standard view. We show how this provides a comprehensive analysis of the complex case and number stacking facts and further, allows for a straightforward (although nontrivial) mapping between the morphology and the syntax as outlined in Sadler and Nordlinger (2004).


* Correspondence address: Louisa Sadler, Dept. of Language and Linguistics, University of Essex, Wivenhoe Park, Colchester CO4 3SQ, UK.

Received: 2003-03-04
Revised: 2003-07-08
Published Online: 2006-08-11
Published in Print: 2006-05-01

© Walter de Gruyter

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