From mcginnis at ucalgary.ca Sat Nov 16 19:32:41 2002 From: mcginnis at ucalgary.ca (Martha McGinnis) Date: Sat, 16 Nov 2002 12:32:41 -0700 Subject: Mark Volpe: Derivation by Phase Message-ID: Dear Listers, I'm interested in specific articles where Chomsky's Derivation by Phase (DBP) and the morphological interface is addressed. Does anyone know of such article(s), or have such in submission, willing to send me an attachment? Thanks in advance,---Mark __________________________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Web Hosting - Let the expert host your site http://webhosting.yahoo.com From mcginnis at ucalgary.ca Sat Nov 16 19:37:12 2002 From: mcginnis at ucalgary.ca (Martha McGinnis) Date: Sat, 16 Nov 2002 12:37:12 -0700 Subject: Mark Volpe: ROOT in DM (reply to Dan Everett) Message-ID: Hi again listers, In reference to your query Dan, if I recall correctly, Haspelmath cites Georgian or at least one of the languages of the Caucasian region, as one of the rare languages which derive 'die' and 'kill' from the same ROOT. Perhaps if Karine Megerdoomian is reading, she could tell us about the specifics of Armenian? Although genetically unrelated, it's a lot closer geographically. I don't think it's the case that genetic relation has anything to do with it, but it seems more intimately related to culture. Cheers,---Mark __________________________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Y! Web Hosting - Let the expert host your web site http://webhosting.yahoo.com/ From mcginnis at ucalgary.ca Mon Nov 18 16:51:14 2002 From: mcginnis at ucalgary.ca (Martha McGinnis) Date: Mon, 18 Nov 2002 09:51:14 -0700 Subject: Alec Marantz: Derivation by Phase (reply to Mark Volpe) Message-ID: There's an interesting discussion of this issue, with applications to problems in Slovenian and English, in: Tatjana Marvin (2002): Topics in the Stress and Syntax of Words a recent dissertation available from MITWLP: http://web.mit.edu/mitwpl/ An abstract appears on that site. --Alec Marantz >Dear Listers, > I'm interested in specific articles where Chomsky's >Derivation by Phase (DBP) and the morphological interface >is addressed. Does anyone know of such article(s), or have >such in submission, willing to send me an attachment? > Thanks in advance,---Mark > >__________________________________________________ >Do you Yahoo!? >Yahoo! Web Hosting - Let the expert host your site >http://webhosting.yahoo.com -- marantz at mit.edu From mcginnis at ucalgary.ca Mon Nov 18 16:51:55 2002 From: mcginnis at ucalgary.ca (Martha McGinnis) Date: Mon, 18 Nov 2002 09:51:55 -0700 Subject: Dan Everett: ROOT in DM (reply to Mark Volpe) Message-ID: In Piraha die and kill are related syntactically. If one of the verb roots meaning 'cease to be' (sort of means that) is used with an object, it means kill, if no object, it means die. But there are many other verb roots that can mean kill or die and are very specific as to the manner of death. Dan On Saturday, November 16, 2002, at 07:37 pm, Martha McGinnis wrote: > Hi again listers, > In reference to your query Dan, if I recall > correctly, Haspelmath cites Georgian or at least one > of the languages of the Caucasian region, as one of > the rare languages which derive 'die' and 'kill' from > the same ROOT. > Perhaps if Karine Megerdoomian is reading, she > could tell us about the specifics of Armenian? > Although genetically unrelated, it's a lot closer > geographically. I don't think it's the case that > genetic relation has anything to do with it, but it > seems more intimately related to culture. > Cheers,---Mark > > __________________________________________________ > Do you Yahoo!? > Y! Web Hosting - Let the expert host your web site > http://webhosting.yahoo.com/ > > ******************** Dan Everett Professor of Phonetics and Phonology Department of Linguistics University of Manchester Oxford Road Manchester, UK M13 9PL Phone: 44-161-275-3158 Department Fax: 44-161-275-3187 http://lings.ln.man.ac.uk/ From mcginnis at ucalgary.ca Tue Nov 26 17:02:33 2002 From: mcginnis at ucalgary.ca (Martha McGinnis) Date: Tue, 26 Nov 2002 10:02:33 -0700 Subject: Mark Volpe: Derivation by Phase (reply to Alec Marantz) Message-ID: Hi Listers, Prof. Marantz, Thank you! That looks very helpful indeed! I'll put in my order. Best,---Mark __________________________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Web Hosting - Let the expert host your site http://webhosting.yahoo.com From mcginnis at ucalgary.ca Sat Nov 16 19:32:41 2002 From: mcginnis at ucalgary.ca (Martha McGinnis) Date: Sat, 16 Nov 2002 12:32:41 -0700 Subject: Mark Volpe: Derivation by Phase Message-ID: Dear Listers, I'm interested in specific articles where Chomsky's Derivation by Phase (DBP) and the morphological interface is addressed. Does anyone know of such article(s), or have such in submission, willing to send me an attachment? Thanks in advance,---Mark __________________________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Web Hosting - Let the expert host your site http://webhosting.yahoo.com From mcginnis at ucalgary.ca Sat Nov 16 19:37:12 2002 From: mcginnis at ucalgary.ca (Martha McGinnis) Date: Sat, 16 Nov 2002 12:37:12 -0700 Subject: Mark Volpe: ROOT in DM (reply to Dan Everett) Message-ID: Hi again listers, In reference to your query Dan, if I recall correctly, Haspelmath cites Georgian or at least one of the languages of the Caucasian region, as one of the rare languages which derive 'die' and 'kill' from the same ROOT. Perhaps if Karine Megerdoomian is reading, she could tell us about the specifics of Armenian? Although genetically unrelated, it's a lot closer geographically. I don't think it's the case that genetic relation has anything to do with it, but it seems more intimately related to culture. Cheers,---Mark __________________________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Y! Web Hosting - Let the expert host your web site http://webhosting.yahoo.com/ From mcginnis at ucalgary.ca Mon Nov 18 16:51:14 2002 From: mcginnis at ucalgary.ca (Martha McGinnis) Date: Mon, 18 Nov 2002 09:51:14 -0700 Subject: Alec Marantz: Derivation by Phase (reply to Mark Volpe) Message-ID: There's an interesting discussion of this issue, with applications to problems in Slovenian and English, in: Tatjana Marvin (2002): Topics in the Stress and Syntax of Words a recent dissertation available from MITWLP: http://web.mit.edu/mitwpl/ An abstract appears on that site. --Alec Marantz >Dear Listers, > I'm interested in specific articles where Chomsky's >Derivation by Phase (DBP) and the morphological interface >is addressed. Does anyone know of such article(s), or have >such in submission, willing to send me an attachment? > Thanks in advance,---Mark > >__________________________________________________ >Do you Yahoo!? >Yahoo! Web Hosting - Let the expert host your site >http://webhosting.yahoo.com -- marantz at mit.edu From mcginnis at ucalgary.ca Mon Nov 18 16:51:55 2002 From: mcginnis at ucalgary.ca (Martha McGinnis) Date: Mon, 18 Nov 2002 09:51:55 -0700 Subject: Dan Everett: ROOT in DM (reply to Mark Volpe) Message-ID: In Piraha die and kill are related syntactically. If one of the verb roots meaning 'cease to be' (sort of means that) is used with an object, it means kill, if no object, it means die. But there are many other verb roots that can mean kill or die and are very specific as to the manner of death. Dan On Saturday, November 16, 2002, at 07:37 pm, Martha McGinnis wrote: > Hi again listers, > In reference to your query Dan, if I recall > correctly, Haspelmath cites Georgian or at least one > of the languages of the Caucasian region, as one of > the rare languages which derive 'die' and 'kill' from > the same ROOT. > Perhaps if Karine Megerdoomian is reading, she > could tell us about the specifics of Armenian? > Although genetically unrelated, it's a lot closer > geographically. I don't think it's the case that > genetic relation has anything to do with it, but it > seems more intimately related to culture. > Cheers,---Mark > > __________________________________________________ > Do you Yahoo!? > Y! Web Hosting - Let the expert host your web site > http://webhosting.yahoo.com/ > > ******************** Dan Everett Professor of Phonetics and Phonology Department of Linguistics University of Manchester Oxford Road Manchester, UK M13 9PL Phone: 44-161-275-3158 Department Fax: 44-161-275-3187 http://lings.ln.man.ac.uk/ From mcginnis at ucalgary.ca Tue Nov 26 17:02:33 2002 From: mcginnis at ucalgary.ca (Martha McGinnis) Date: Tue, 26 Nov 2002 10:02:33 -0700 Subject: Mark Volpe: Derivation by Phase (reply to Alec Marantz) Message-ID: Hi Listers, Prof. Marantz, Thank you! That looks very helpful indeed! I'll put in my order. Best,---Mark __________________________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Web Hosting - Let the expert host your site http://webhosting.yahoo.com