On why word phases cannot account for Lexical Integrity Effects
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/3850DOI
doi: 10.1418/34537View/ Open
accepted manuscript version. Online version available at http://dx.doi.org/10.1418/34537 (PDF)
Date
2011Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Fábregas, AntonioAbstract
This article discusses the possibility that Lexical Integrity effects can be explained by proposing that words are syntactic phases, thus eliminating these effects from the set of phenomena that argue in favour of the autonomy of morphology. The proposal is discussed from both a theoretical and an empirical perspective, and it is shown, in the first place, that the phases proposed to give account of some of these phenomena do not behave like syntactic phases and, secondly, that syntactic phases would be insufficient to cope with the impossibility of pronominal coreference with word internal
constituents. It is concluded that, given our present understanding of syntax, Lexical Integrity effects still argue for the autonomy of morphology.
Citation
Lingue e linguaggio 10(2011) nr. 1 s. 3-28Metadata
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