TL;DR: The authors give a short summary of the basic assumptions and principles of minimalist morphology (MM) proposed in Wunderlich and Fabri (1993) and then consider the construction of paradigms more precisely and finally turn to two questions raised in recent literature: how inflectional classes are made up and whether rules of referral are needed.
Abstract: In this paper,1 I will give a short summary of the basic assumptions and principles of Minimalist Morphology (MM) proposed in Wunderlich (1992a) and Wunderlich and Fabri (1993). I will then consider the construction of paradigms more precisely and finally turn to two questions raised in the recent literature: how inflectional classes are made up, and whether rules of referral are needed.
TL;DR: This volume presents a selection of papers read at the international conference "Lexicon in Focus," held under the auspices of the Sonderforschungsbereich "Theory of the Lexicon" at Wuppertal in August 1998.
Abstract: Barbara Stiebels / Dieter Wunderlich: Introduction Sharon Inkelas: Phonotactic blocking through structural immunity Cemil Orhan Orgun / Ronald Sprouse: Understanding ungrammaticality Janet Grijzenhout / Martin Kramer: Final devoicing and voicing assimilation in Dutch derivation and cliticization James P Blevins: Markedness and Blocking in German Declensional Paradigms Carsten Steins: How to account for non-concatenative phenomena in a morpheme-based theory Stephen R Anderson: Some lexicalist remarks on incorporation phenomena Elisabeth Loebel: Case alternation in Finnish copular constructions Gisbert Fanselow: Optimal Exceptions Barbara Stiebels: Linker inventories, linking splits and lexical economy Dieter Wunderlich: Predicate composition and argument extension as general options - a study in the interface of semantic and conceptual structure
TL;DR: The authors discuss the relation between language typology and Universal Grammar and provide evidence for the UG hypothesis in the context of second-language acquisition and explaination in second-person translation.
Abstract: 1. Preface 2. What counts as evidence in linguistics?: An introduction (by Penke, Martina) 3. Typological evidence and Universal Grammar (by Newmeyer, Frederick J.) 4. Remarks on the relation between language typology and Universal Grammar: Commentary on Newmeyer (by Baltin, Mark) 5. Does linguistic explanation presuppose linguistic description? (by Haspelmath, Martin) 6. Remarks on description and explanation in grammar: Commentary on Haspelmath (by Aissen, Judith) 7. Author's response (by Haspelmath, Martin) 8. From UG to Universals: Linguistic adaptation through iterated learning (by Kirby, Simon) 9. Form, meaning and speakers in the evolution of language: Commentary on Kirby, Smith and Brighton (by Croft, William A.) 10. Author's response (by Kirby, Simon) 11. Why assume UG? (by Wunderlich, Dieter) 12. What kind of evidence could refute the UG hypothesis?: Commentary on Wunderlich (by Tomasello, Michael) 13. Author's response: Is there any evidence that refutes the UG hypothesis? (by Wunderlich, Dieter) 14. A question of relevance: Some remarks on standard languages (by Weiss, Helmut) 15. The Relevance of Variation: Remarks on Weiss's Standard-Dialect-Problem (by Simon, Horst J.) 16. Author's response (by Weiss, Helmut) 17. Universals, innateness and explanation in second language acquisition (by Eckman, Fred) 18. 'Internal' versus 'external' universals: Commentary on Eckman (by White, Lydia) 19. Author's response: 'External' universals and explanation in SLA (by Eckman, Fred) 20. What counts as evidence in historical linguistics? (by Fischer, Olga) 21. Abstraction and performance: Commentary on Fischer (by Lightfoot, David W.) 22. Author's response (by Fischer, Olga) 23. Index
TL;DR: Wunderlich and Wunderlich as discussed by the authors described a Burned-rock Middlen Site and a Terrace Site as well as a Rockshelter Site with a terrace.
Abstract: Table of Contents: Introduction -- Wunderlich: A Burned-Rock Middlen Site -- Footbridge: A Terrace Site -- Oblate: A Rockshelter Site -- Conclusions and Synthesis -- Literature Cited