HEADEDNESS AND THE STRUCTURE OF YORÙBÁ COMPOUND WORDS

In contemporary morphology, morphologically complex words are assumed to have heads. Williams (1981) proposes the right-head rule (RHR), later modified by Selkirk (1982). However, Owolabi (1995a) argues that the head of Yorùbá complex words is the left-hand member contrary to Williams’ proposal. He...

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Main Author: Oyè Táíwò
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Crane Publishing Co 2009-06-01
Series:Taiwan Journal of Linguistics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://tjl.nccu.edu.tw/volume7-1/7.1-2Taiwo.pdf
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spelling doaj-9c07d8a351f24ca6af5033f4ce92f0912020-11-24T22:26:06ZengCrane Publishing CoTaiwan Journal of Linguistics1729-46492009-06-01712752HEADEDNESS AND THE STRUCTURE OF YORÙBÁ COMPOUND WORDSOyè TáíwòIn contemporary morphology, morphologically complex words are assumed to have heads. Williams (1981) proposes the right-head rule (RHR), later modified by Selkirk (1982). However, Owolabi (1995a) argues that the head of Yorùbá complex words is the left-hand member contrary to Williams’ proposal. He limits the assignment of head to only his Class I prefixes and does not assign heads to nouns which are derived by the attachment of class II prefixes. The work also raises the question as to whether or not all morphologically complex words in the Yorùbá language are headed. This work examines the structure of Yorùbá complex words such as compounds (especially those derived through desententialization), and reduplication, and those derived through the attachment of Owolabi’s Class II prefixes. We attempt to assign heads to these complex words; we also re-analyze Owolabi’s Class II prefixes and conclude that they actually consist of two morphemes each, following Awobuluyi (1967, 2008). This present work reveals that most of the Yorùbá morphologically complex words have their left-hand members as head. We propose a rule to account for the head in morphology.http://tjl.nccu.edu.tw/volume7-1/7.1-2Taiwo.pdfheadednessthe Yorùbá languageprefixescompoundingreduplication
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Oyè Táíwò
spellingShingle Oyè Táíwò
HEADEDNESS AND THE STRUCTURE OF YORÙBÁ COMPOUND WORDS
Taiwan Journal of Linguistics
headedness
the Yorùbá language
prefixes
compounding
reduplication
author_facet Oyè Táíwò
author_sort Oyè Táíwò
title HEADEDNESS AND THE STRUCTURE OF YORÙBÁ COMPOUND WORDS
title_short HEADEDNESS AND THE STRUCTURE OF YORÙBÁ COMPOUND WORDS
title_full HEADEDNESS AND THE STRUCTURE OF YORÙBÁ COMPOUND WORDS
title_fullStr HEADEDNESS AND THE STRUCTURE OF YORÙBÁ COMPOUND WORDS
title_full_unstemmed HEADEDNESS AND THE STRUCTURE OF YORÙBÁ COMPOUND WORDS
title_sort headedness and the structure of yorùbá compound words
publisher Crane Publishing Co
series Taiwan Journal of Linguistics
issn 1729-4649
publishDate 2009-06-01
description In contemporary morphology, morphologically complex words are assumed to have heads. Williams (1981) proposes the right-head rule (RHR), later modified by Selkirk (1982). However, Owolabi (1995a) argues that the head of Yorùbá complex words is the left-hand member contrary to Williams’ proposal. He limits the assignment of head to only his Class I prefixes and does not assign heads to nouns which are derived by the attachment of class II prefixes. The work also raises the question as to whether or not all morphologically complex words in the Yorùbá language are headed. This work examines the structure of Yorùbá complex words such as compounds (especially those derived through desententialization), and reduplication, and those derived through the attachment of Owolabi’s Class II prefixes. We attempt to assign heads to these complex words; we also re-analyze Owolabi’s Class II prefixes and conclude that they actually consist of two morphemes each, following Awobuluyi (1967, 2008). This present work reveals that most of the Yorùbá morphologically complex words have their left-hand members as head. We propose a rule to account for the head in morphology.
topic headedness
the Yorùbá language
prefixes
compounding
reduplication
url http://tjl.nccu.edu.tw/volume7-1/7.1-2Taiwo.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT oyetaiwo headednessandthestructureofyorubacompoundwords
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