Concept information
Preferred term
morphological process
Broader concept
Narrower concepts
Example
- A morphological process may be able to spread quickly in terms of its ability to generate new words and yet not be very common in the general language. (Vegnaduzzo, 2009)
- As can be seen in some cases Old Hungarian had a richer set of morphological processes (for instance verbal conjugation) but in other cases Modern Hungarian has developed some more morphological distinctions (like that of ordinal and fractal numbers). (Simon & Vincze, 2016)
- Expanding productivity is intended to assess the rate at which a morphological process is expanding in the language. (Vegnaduzzo, 2009)
- Furthermore there are some morphological processes that can also encode uncertain or irreal meaning such as the suffix -hat/-het which roughly corresponds to the English auxiliary may or conditional forms of the verb. (Szabó, Vincze, Simkó, Varga & Hangya, 2016)
- Treating complex adjective formation as a morphological process allows us to characterize them in the light of the notion of morphological productivity. (Vegnaduzzo, 2009)
In other languages
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French
URI
http://data.loterre.fr/ark:/67375/8LP-RFXTJ5C5-B
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