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Regularity vs anomaly: the acquisition of Hebrew inflectional morphology*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 September 2008

Ruth A. Berman
Affiliation:
Tel Aviv University

Abstract

The paper examines the acquisition of selected aspects of the inflectional system of Modern Hebrew, a language rich in bound morphology. By age three, children acquire the major inflectionally marked categories of the system, in the sense that they make semantically relevant distinctions of tense, person, number, and gender. Certain morphologically complex forms are simplified by neutralization or reformulation or by analytic paraphrases of bound constructions. Various anomalous forms are handled by regularization of lexical exceptions or by conflating forms belonging to different lexical patterns, while forms which are opaque due to neutralization of historically distinct root consonants or to inaccessibility of rules governing their alternations are processed by reference to certain ‘paradigms’ taken as basic.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1981

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