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Free prefix ordering in Chintang
171
Citations
8
References
2007
Year
Prosodic SubcategorizationLanguage ExperienceMorphology (Linguistics)Syntactic StructurePhonologyLinguistic TheorySyntaxPrefix PermutabilityWorld LanguagesHistorical LinguisticsGrammarLanguage StudiesAncient Chinese SyntaxOrder TheoryLanguage ChangeMorphologyEast Asian LanguagesGrammatical WordsFree Prefix OrderingBilingual PhonologyPhonology MorphologyRomance LanguagesArtsLinguistics
This article demonstrates prefix permutability in Chintang (Sino-Tibetan, Nepal) that is not constrained by any semantic or morphosyntactic structure, or by any dialect, sociolect, or idiolect choice—a phenomenon ruled out by standard assumptions about grammatical words. The prefixes are fully fledged parts of grammatical words and are different from clitics on a large number of standard criteria. The analysis of phonological word domains suggests that prefix permutability is a side-effect of prosodic subcategorization: prefixes occur in variable orders because each prefix and each stem element project a phonological word of their own, and each such word can host a prefix, at any position.
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