Lexical Borrowing Targets Spans
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/27682Date
2022-11-11Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Tat, DenizAbstract
In this study, I revisit the claim that nominals denoting complex events must derive from
discernible verbal stems and must be headed by an overt nominalizer. I show that Turkish has a set
of nominals, crucially of foreign origin, which provides counter-evidence to both claims. From the
perspective of Turkish grammar, they are morphologically noncompositional, manifesting neither a
detectable verbal basis nor an overt nominalizer although they are categorically complex event nominals. Since (zero-)derived nominals of Turkic origin do not allow argument structure, the puzzling
makeup of underived complex event nominals in question boils down to their loan word nature.
I show that their behavior is different from both derived nominals as well as gerundive nominals
in important ways. I claim that they are defective nominalizations lacking an nP representation.
After reviewing previous accounts of these nominals, I consider three syntactic approaches to word
derivation, which differ in their theoretical assumptions only in granularity, and conclude that the
Spanning approach of Bye and Svenonius provides us with a conceptually superior account.
Publisher
MDPICitation
Tat. Lexical Borrowing Targets Spans. Languages. 2022Metadata
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