Relational Morphology: A Cousin of Construction Grammar
Author(s)
Jackendoff, Ray S; Audring, Jenny
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Relational morphology (RM) is a novel approach to word structure that bears a close relation to construction grammar (CxG). Based on the parallel architecture framework, its basic question is: what linguistic entities are stored in long-term memory, and in what form? Like CxG, RM situates the “rules of grammar” in an extended lexicon, right along with words, multiword expressions such as idioms and collocations, and meaningful syntactic constructions. However, its notion of schema enriches CxG’s notion of construction in a number of respects, including (a) the possibility of purely formal schemas that lack meaning, (b) a more precise way of specifying relations among lexical items than standard inheritance, (c) the possibility of “horizontal” relations between individual words and between schemas, (d) a clearer characterization of the distinction between productive and nonproductive phenomena, and (e) more explicit integration with theories of language processing and of other domains of cognition.
Date issued
2020-09Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Brain and Cognitive SciencesJournal
Frontiers in Psyhcology
Publisher
Frontiers Media SA
Citation
Jackendoff, Ray and Jenny Audring. "Relational Morphology: A Cousin of Construction Grammar." Frontiers in Psyhcology 11 (September 2020): 2241. © 2020 Jackendoff and Audring
Version: Final published version
ISSN
1664-1078