Language Typology and Syntactic Description: Typological distinctions in word-formation

Introduction This chapter deals with patterns of word-formation, their classification and parameters of cross-linguistic variation. Grammatical words (section 1) in most languages have an internal structure; the typological parameters which account for their cross-linguistic variation are discussed in section 2. Word-formation processes correlate with syntax in different ways depending on language type. One such word-formation process – known as ‘the most nearly syntactic of all’ (Mithun (1984)) – is noun incorporation, discussed in section 3. The structure of words in a language can be more or less iconically motivated (see section 4). Word-formation, traditionally, falls into compounding and derivation. A compound consists of morphemes which could be free (see section 5), while derivation involves the use of different classes of bound morphemes and of morphological processes to form words (see section 6). Word-formation processes vary in terms of their productivity – see section 7. Word-formation processes are prone to distinct patterns of grammaticalization and lexicalization – see section 8. A brief summary is given in section 9, and in section 10 I provide suggestions for field workers describing word-formation in previously undocumented or poorly documented languages. The word Word-formation accounts for the structured organization of the lexicon. The lexicon is usually conceived of as a list of the form–meaning correspondences conventionalized by speakers, but which are largely arbitrary. However, this list may be structurally organized.