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Non-canonical morphological patterns in Turkish: Evidence from person-number markers

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dc.contributor Graduate Program in Linguistics.
dc.contributor.advisor Göksel, Aslı.
dc.contributor.advisor Kunduracı, Aysun.
dc.contributor.author Erdem, Münevver.
dc.date.accessioned 2023-03-16T11:43:41Z
dc.date.available 2023-03-16T11:43:41Z
dc.date.issued 2018.
dc.identifier.other LING 2018 E74
dc.identifier.uri http://digitalarchive.boun.edu.tr/handle/123456789/15864
dc.description.abstract This study investigates the structure and behavior of the person-number markers in the Turkish verbal inflectional paradigms. It mainly argues against the predominant view that Turkish morphology is highly regular and transparent by providing evidence from the content-form mismatches displayed by the person-number markers on verbal word-forms. There are two novel attempts of this study. First, by extending the notion of inflectional classes, it proposes that Turkish verbal inflectional paradigms function like inflectional classes where the same content is realized by different sets of markers in each paradigm. Second, it models the Turkish verbal inflectional paradigms and analyzes multiple content-form mismatches due to some irregular behavior of the person-number markers within a word-based paradigm function theory - the paradigm-linkage theory (Stump, 2016). The conclusions of this research are as follows: i) When the examples of non-canonical aspects within the nominal paradigms are also taken into consideration, it is observed that all Turkish inflectional paradigms host non-canonical morphological patterns. ii) Turkish has verbal inflectional classes where the stems of different lexemes are replaced by the complex stems: stem+TAM (tense-aspect-mood) marker. iii) Based on the content-form mismatches and the irregularities following a regular pattern within the same paradigm or across paradigms, the data of the study support the view that inflectional paradigms are primitives rather than just descriptive devices.
dc.publisher Thesis (M.A.) - Bogazici University. Institute for Graduate Studies in the Social Sciences, 2018.
dc.subject.lcsh Turkish language -- Grammar.
dc.subject.lcsh Turkish language -- Suffixes and prefixes.
dc.title Non-canonical morphological patterns in Turkish: Evidence from person-number markers


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