Paradigmatic Relations in Word Formation brings together contributions that aim to discuss the nature of paradigms in derivational morphology and compounding in the light of evidence from various languages.
Among others, the topics considered in the volume include the interconnectedness between derivational families and paradigms, the constitutive characteristics of a word-formation paradigm, the degree of predictability of word-formation paradigms, and the specificity of paradigms depending on the variety of recognised word-formation processes and patterns.
Jesús Fernández-Domínguez, Ph.D. (2008), University of Jaén, is Senior Lecturer at the University of Granada. He has been involved in several publicly funded research projects and his publications, on English synchronic lexical morphology, have appeared in forums like
Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Linguistics,
Languages in Contrast and
Terminology.
Alexandra Bagasheva, Ph.D. (2004), Higher Attestation Commission and Specialized Scientific Council in Linguistics, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, is Associate Professor at the Department of English and American Studies of Sofia University “St. Kliment Ohridski”. Her publications on synchronic word formation and cognitive linguistics have appeared in
Poznań Studies in Contemporary Linguistics, the John Benjamins’ series
Human Cognitive Processing 44,
Competing patterns in English affixation (Peter Lang), etc.
Cristina Lara-Clares is a researcher at the University of Granada (MA, 2015). Currently completing her Ph.D., her research has been presented at international conferences (2016, 2018), and has been published (2017, 2019). She has been working in several research projects.
List of Tables and Figures Notes on Contributors
1
What Paradigms and What For? Jesús Fernández-Domínguez, Alexandra Bagasheva, and Cristina Lara-Clares
2
Paradigmaticity in Compounding Alexandra Bagasheva
3
Characterizing Derivational Paradigms Bernard Fradin
4
The Level of Paradigmaticity within Derivational Networks Petr Kos
5
Doublet Formation in Palestinian Arabic—Where Do Paradigms Interfere? Lior Laks and Faten Yousef
6
What We Talk about When We Talk about Paradigms: Representing Latin Word Formation Eleonora Litta and Marco Budassi
7
A Paradigmatic Approach to Compounding Jan Radimský
8
Of Brownie Girls and Aussie Families: A New Look at Morphosemantic Paradigmaticity in Adj+ie/y Nominalisations José A. Sánchez Fajardo and Elizaveta Tarasova
9
Neoclassical Word Formation in English: A Paradigm-Based Account of -scope Formations Ana Díaz-Negrillo
Index
The readership is the research community specialized in the field of word-formation and, more specifically, derivational paradigms, both in English and in other languages.