‘Morphemes’ and ‘Vocabulary Items’ Distinction in Distributed Morphology: Evidence from Hausa

Traditionally, ‘morphemes’ are consisting complex morphophonological properties and syntactic-semantic properties. However, in realizational theories such as Distributed Morphology, which is a syntactic approach to word formation, morphemes are abstract bundle of features without phonological proper...

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Main Author: Isah Abdullahi Muhammad
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Learned Press 2018-12-01
Series:Macrolinguistics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.macrolinguistics.com/index.php?c=msg&id=769&
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spelling doaj-b749b5b734da4024943c90143a3180932020-11-24T21:42:47ZengThe Learned PressMacrolinguistics1934-57551934-57552018-12-0169596810.26478/ja2018.6.9.5‘Morphemes’ and ‘Vocabulary Items’ Distinction in Distributed Morphology: Evidence from HausaIsah Abdullahi Muhammad0Usmanu Danfodiyo UniversityTraditionally, ‘morphemes’ are consisting complex morphophonological properties and syntactic-semantic properties. However, in realizational theories such as Distributed Morphology, which is a syntactic approach to word formation, morphemes are abstract bundle of features without phonological properties, e.g. pl, fem, masc, categorizers (Embick, 2015) etc. Nevertheless, when language assigns phonological properties to those features (namely late insertion), they serve as vocabulary items instead of morphemes. This was confirmed by Marantz (2000:15), who proposed that ‘… we see, overtly, the vocabulary items, not the morphemes.’ Moreover, morphemes are generative and there is no any bound morpheme, all are free (Hankamer & Mikkelsen, 2018). Vocabulary items are not generative but expandable and visibly they can either be free or bound. So this paper intends to elaborate these issues together with evidence from Hausa. The entire paper is divided into following subsections: Introduction, Distributed morphology, morphemes and vocabulary items in Hausa and their differences, followed by Conclusion remarks. http://www.macrolinguistics.com/index.php?c=msg&id=769&Distributed Morphologymorphemesvocabulary itemsHausa
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Isah Abdullahi Muhammad
spellingShingle Isah Abdullahi Muhammad
‘Morphemes’ and ‘Vocabulary Items’ Distinction in Distributed Morphology: Evidence from Hausa
Macrolinguistics
Distributed Morphology
morphemes
vocabulary items
Hausa
author_facet Isah Abdullahi Muhammad
author_sort Isah Abdullahi Muhammad
title ‘Morphemes’ and ‘Vocabulary Items’ Distinction in Distributed Morphology: Evidence from Hausa
title_short ‘Morphemes’ and ‘Vocabulary Items’ Distinction in Distributed Morphology: Evidence from Hausa
title_full ‘Morphemes’ and ‘Vocabulary Items’ Distinction in Distributed Morphology: Evidence from Hausa
title_fullStr ‘Morphemes’ and ‘Vocabulary Items’ Distinction in Distributed Morphology: Evidence from Hausa
title_full_unstemmed ‘Morphemes’ and ‘Vocabulary Items’ Distinction in Distributed Morphology: Evidence from Hausa
title_sort ‘morphemes’ and ‘vocabulary items’ distinction in distributed morphology: evidence from hausa
publisher The Learned Press
series Macrolinguistics
issn 1934-5755
1934-5755
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Traditionally, ‘morphemes’ are consisting complex morphophonological properties and syntactic-semantic properties. However, in realizational theories such as Distributed Morphology, which is a syntactic approach to word formation, morphemes are abstract bundle of features without phonological properties, e.g. pl, fem, masc, categorizers (Embick, 2015) etc. Nevertheless, when language assigns phonological properties to those features (namely late insertion), they serve as vocabulary items instead of morphemes. This was confirmed by Marantz (2000:15), who proposed that ‘… we see, overtly, the vocabulary items, not the morphemes.’ Moreover, morphemes are generative and there is no any bound morpheme, all are free (Hankamer & Mikkelsen, 2018). Vocabulary items are not generative but expandable and visibly they can either be free or bound. So this paper intends to elaborate these issues together with evidence from Hausa. The entire paper is divided into following subsections: Introduction, Distributed morphology, morphemes and vocabulary items in Hausa and their differences, followed by Conclusion remarks.
topic Distributed Morphology
morphemes
vocabulary items
Hausa
url http://www.macrolinguistics.com/index.php?c=msg&id=769&
work_keys_str_mv AT isahabdullahimuhammad morphemesandvocabularyitemsdistinctionindistributedmorphologyevidencefromhausa
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