Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
Matthews is perhaps best known for his writings on linguistic morphology.
Word Structure is an international academic journal covering linguistic morphology and all related disciplines.
In linguistic morphology, fossilization refers to two close notions.
Transgressive is a term of linguistic morphology denoting a special form of verb.
A free morpheme as opposed to a bound morpheme or bound form in linguistic morphology.
Introducing linguistic morphology (2nd ed.)
While same effect is often observed as Hypocoristic forms of nicknames in Linguistic morphology, short brand names are often invented by consumers themselves.
In linguistic morphology, the term bracketing paradox refers to morphologically complex words which apparently have more than one incompatible analysis, or bracketing, simultaneously.
Agglutination is a process in linguistic morphology derivation in which complex words are formed by stringing together morphemes, each with a single grammatical or semantic meaning.
In linguistics, particularly linguistic morphology, bracketing is a term of art that refers to how an utterance can be represented as a hierarchical tree of constituent parts.
In linguistic morphology and information retrieval, stemming is the process for reducing inflected (or sometimes derived) words to their stem, base or root form-generally a written word form.
In linguistic morphology, an uninflected word is a word that has no morphological markers (inflection) such as affixes, ablaut, consonant gradation, etc., indicating declension or conjugation.
In linguistic morphology, a transfix is a discontinuous affix which is inserted into a word root, as in root-and-pattern systems of morphology, like those of many Semitic languages.
He is also the author of Word Structure, a students' introduction to linguistic morphology (Routledge), and of online resources on Shakespeare's character-names and on the place-names of Hayling Island.
He is the founder and General Editor of the Edinburgh Textbooks on the English Language, the author of several works on phonology, and one of the founding Editors of the linguistic morphology journal, Word Structure.
Outlines of Tibeto-Burman linguistic morphology, with special reference to the prefixes, infixes and suffixes of classical Tibetan and the languages of the Kachin, Bodo, Nǎgǎ, Kuki-Chin and Burma groups.