Morphology

This is an updated and substantially revised edition of Peter Matthews’s well-known Morphology, first published in 1974. It includes chapters on inflectional and lexical morphology, derivational processes and productivity, compounds, paradigms, and much new material on markedness and other aspects of iconicity. As in the first edition, the theoretical discussion is eclectic and critical: its scope ranges from the ancient grammarians to the work of Chomsky and his followers, the disintegration of the classical Chomskyan scheme, and the renewed standing of morphology and historical linguistics in recent years. The examples are drawn from English and other European languages, ancient and modern. The work will appeal both to specialists in particular languages - it contains much original material - and students of general linguistics. For this new edition much now obsolete discussion has been removed and replaced by discussion of current trends, and the further reading sections have been thoroughly updated.

• Morphology will appear in the redesigned series livery, which remains distinctively red and plain, but with more modern typeface and details • Matthews (who is Professor of Linguistics at Cambridge) has updated the text to take into account recent developments, and has revised fully the further reading section • The book looks at a wide range of languages to cover the topic of morphology, the status of which has advanced since publication of the first edition. Morphology is the branch of grammar which studies the structure of words, classically

Contents

Principal references; 1. What is morphology?; 2. Word, word-form and lexeme; 3. Inflections and word-formation; 4. Lexical derivation; 5. Compounds; 6. Morphemes and allomorphs; 7. Morphological processes; 8. Morphophonemics; 9. Properties and their exponents; 10. Paradigms; 11. Inflectional morphology and syntax; 12. Iconicity.