
Published online:
01 September 2009
Published in print:
30 July 2009
Online ISBN:
9780191720628
Print ISBN:
9780199547548
Contents
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7.1 Introduction 7.1 Introduction
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7.2 The problem of word segmentation 7.2 The problem of word segmentation
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7.3 Success with word discovery? 7.3 Success with word discovery?
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7.4 The Linguistica project 7.4 The Linguistica project
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7.5 MDL, grammar simplicity, and analogy 7.5 MDL, grammar simplicity, and analogy
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7.6 The challenging of “collapsing” cases 7.6 The challenging of “collapsing” cases
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7.7 From analogy to algorithm 7.7 From analogy to algorithm
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7.8 Discussion and conclusion 7.8 Discussion and conclusion
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7.9 Appendix 7.9 Appendix
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Chapter
7 7 Morphological analogy: Only a beginning
Get access
Pages
137–163
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Published:July 2009
Cite
Goldsmith, John, '7 Morphological analogy: Only a beginning', in James P. Blevins, and Juliette Blevins (eds), Analogy in Grammar: Form and Acquisition (Oxford , 2009; online edn, Oxford Academic, 1 Sept. 2009), https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199547548.003.0007, accessed 24 Apr. 2025.
Abstract
A range of approaches to word structure assume segmentation of words into morphs. This chapter proposes explicit algorithm that takes natural language text as its input, and produces the morphological structure of text as its output. Within this model, formal notions that correspond naturally to the traditional notion of analogy are useful and important as part of a boot-strapping heuristic for the discovery of morphological structure. At the same time, it is necessary to develop a refined quantitative model in order to find the kind of articulated linguistic structures that are to be found in natural languages.
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