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29.1 Introduction 29.1 Introduction
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29.2 Productive patterns of root compounds 29.2 Productive patterns of root compounds
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29.3 Deverbal compounds 29.3 Deverbal compounds
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29.3.1 Action nouns as heads 29.3.1 Action nouns as heads
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29.3.2 Agent nouns 29.3.2 Agent nouns
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29.4 Some notes on particle verbs 29.4 Some notes on particle verbs
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29.5 Inflection and compounding 29.5 Inflection and compounding
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29.6 Derivation outside compounding 29.6 Derivation outside compounding
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29.7 Exocentric compounds 29.7 Exocentric compounds
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29.8 Coordinative compounds 29.8 Coordinative compounds
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29.9 Conclusion 29.9 Conclusion
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29 Uralic, Finno-Ugric: Hungarian
Get accessFerenc Kiefer holds a research professorship at the Research Institute for Linguistics, Hungarian Academy of Sciences. He was professor in general linguistics at Budapest University until his retirement. Main fields of research: Hungarian and general linguistics, especially morphology, lexical semantics, and pragmatics. He has published more than two hundred articles and twenty books in English, Hungarian, French, and German. He was guest professor in Stockholm, Paris, Stuttgart, Vienna, Aarhus, and Antwerp.
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Published:18 September 2012
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Abstract
This chapter provides an overview of the data of compounding in Hungarian, pointing out some controversial issues concerning both the empirical data and the analysis of certain types of compounds. In establishing the types of compounds, the discussion focuses on productive root compounds. This survey is followed by a discussion of deverbal compounds, concentrating on features that are typical of Hungarian. A separate section is devoted to the discussion of pchapter verbs, which have some features in common with compounds. The chapter concludes with a brief discussion of some residual problems such as inflection and compounding, derivation outside compounding, exocentric compounds, and coordinative compounds.
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