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1.
Slovenian diminutive adjectives and the adjectivizer -ast
Petra Mišmaš, Guy Tabachnick, 2025, published scientific conference contribution abstract

Keywords: Slovenian, derivational morphology, adjectivizers, diminutives, multifunctionality
Published in RUNG: 09.06.2025; Views: 218; Downloads: 0
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2.
How departicipial are "L-participle" nominalisations in Western South Slavic
Marko Simonović, Petra Mišmaš, Stefan Milosavljević, Boban Arsenijević, Katarina Gomboc Čeh, Franc Marušič, Rok Žaucer, 2025, published scientific conference contribution

Abstract: We focus on nominalisations seemingly derived from l-participles, illustrated by lec-nominalisations in Slovenian, in order to establish the nature and position of the l-morpheme as well as the structure of these nominalisations in general. Our research is situated in the current debates on whether the item l in l-participles and l-nominalisations is the same morpheme or two different morphemes, and if the former, whether l-nominalisations are derived from l-participles. We argue that the l-morpheme is a root in both, but also show that it is not the case that lec-nominalisations contain l-participles. The lec-nominalisations are argued to contain a smaller structure than the corresponding l-participle, which is also reflected in the set of theme vowels possible in these nominalisations.
Keywords: Slovenian, participles, nominalisations, morphology, root, affix
Published in RUNG: 23.05.2025; Views: 290; Downloads: 6
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3.
The Western South Slavic verbal suffix -nV /-ne is a diminutive affix with a theme vowel
Ema Štarkl, Marko Simonović, Stefan Milosavljević, Boban Arsenijević, 2025, published scientific conference contribution

Keywords: verbal morphology, semelfactive, diminutive, theme vowel, Slovene, BCMS
Published in RUNG: 23.05.2025; Views: 278; Downloads: 6
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4.
Annotated database of Slovenian adjectives
Petra Mišmaš, Marko Simonović, Stefan Milosavljević, 2025, complete scientific database of research data

Abstract: This database presents the morphological annotation of Slovenian adjectives. It includes the 6,000 most frequent adjectives in Slovenian, extracted from the Gigafida 2.0 corpus (deduplicated) using the CQL [tag="P.*"] on a random sample of 10,000,000 lines in the NoSketch engine in March 2024.  
Keywords: Slovenian, adjectives, morphology, derivation, affixes
Published in RUNG: 09.04.2025; Views: 536; Downloads: 9
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5.
The Western South Slavic verbal suffix -nV/-ne
Ema Štarkl, Stefan Milosavljević, Marko Simonović, Boban Arsenijević, 2025, complete scientific database of research data

Keywords: Western South Slavic, suffix -n, verbal morphology, semelfactive, diminution, theme vowel
Published in RUNG: 06.03.2025; Views: 1041; Downloads: 7
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6.
Lec-nominalizations with an adjusted secondary imperfective morpheme in Slovenian
Petra Mišmaš, Marko Simonović, 2024, complete scientific database of research data

Abstract: This dataset is a derivative of Arsenijević et al. (2024). The goal of the data collection is to identify Slovenian lec-nominalizations (in the original dataset listed as lc-) that have an adjustment of the secondary imperfectivizing morpheme not attested in the corresponding verb. To obtain all relevant nominalizations, the national corpus Gigafida 2.0 was searched for nominalizations ending in -ovalec and -evalec.  
Keywords: nominalizations, Slovenian, verb, adjustment, morphology, morpheme, secondary imperfective
Published in RUNG: 08.01.2025; Views: 1112; Downloads: 10
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7.
8.
Stress and morphology in the Italian verbs
Elena Guerzoni, 2024, other monographs and other completed works

Abstract: In this paper I present an analysis of stress in Italian verbs. A preliminary observation reveals that inflection affects stress position on verbs in an apparently unpredictable fashion. Although, at first sight, the variability of stress placement in Italian verbs seems to preclude a systematic account, this paper shows that once the morphological complexity of verbs is factored in, it is in fact the one and the same algorithm that assigns stress in this entire word class.
Keywords: Italian verb, tense, stress, phonology, morphology
Published in RUNG: 31.07.2024; Views: 1890; Downloads: 0
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9.
Czech speakers learn and apply morphological dependencies : lecture at the University of Nova Gorica, Jezik & Linguistics Colloquia, Nova Gorica, 23. 11. 2023
Guy Tabachnick, 2023, other performed works

Abstract: Theories of morphology must account for lexicalized variation: lexical items that differ unpredictably in their inflection must be memorized individually and differ in their stored representation. When tested on such cases, adult speakers usually follow the “law of frequency matching” (Hayes et al. 2009), extending gradient phonological patterns from the lexicon. In this talk, I present results from two wug tests showing that Czech speakers likewise extend gradient morphological patterns from the lexicon: that is, they productively apply correlations between inflected forms of the same word. I handle lexicalized variation using diacritic features marking lexical entries and propose that Czech speakers have learned a gradient cooccurrence relation between diacritic features, extending the sublexicon model of Gouskova et al. (2015). This approach accounts for phonological and morphological patterns with a unified mechanism. This approach provides an account of morphological dependencies in generative grammar compatible with a piece-based, syntactic theory like Distributed Morphology, responding to Ackerman and Malouf (2013) and others who criticize such theories for being unable to account for these morphological correlations.
Keywords: morphology, psycholinguistics, inflection classes, nonce word study, frequency matching, morphological dependencies, Czech
Published in RUNG: 05.03.2024; Views: 2807; Downloads: 3
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10.
Speakers apply morphological dependencies in the inflection of novel forms : lecture at the University of Connecticut, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Linguistics, Ling Lunch, 18. 4. 2023
Guy Tabachnick, 2023, invited lecture at foreign university

Abstract: Theories of morphology must account for lexicalized variation: lexical items that differ unpredictably in their inflection must be memorized individually and differ in their stored representation. When tested on such cases, adult speakers usually follow the “law of frequency matching” (Hayes et al. 2009), extending gradient phonological patterns from the lexicon. In this talk, I present results from two wug tests showing that Hungarian and Czech speakers likewise extend gradient morphological patterns from the lexicon: that is, they productively imply correlations between inflected forms of the same word. I handle lexicalized variation using diacritic features marking lexical entries and propose that Hungarian and Czech speakers have learned a gradient cooccurrence relation between diacritic features, extending the sublexicon model of Gouskova et al. (2015). This approach also allows for a flexible analysis of traditional inflection classes (in languages like Russian) as emergent clusters of frequently cooccurring features.
Keywords: morphology, psycholinguistics, inflection classes, nonce word study, frequency matching, morphological dependencies, Hungarian, Czech
Published in RUNG: 05.03.2024; Views: 2567; Downloads: 3
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