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Crosslinguistic research on the production of tense morphology in child language has shown that young children use past or perfective forms mainly with telic predicates and present or imperfective forms mainly with atelic predicates. However, this pattern, which has come to be known as the Aspect First Hypothesis, has been challenged in a number of comprehension studies. These studies suggest that children do not rely on aspectual information for their interpretation of tense morphology. The present paper tests the validity of the Aspect First Hypothesis in child Greek by investigating Greek-speaking children’s early comprehension of present, past and future tense morphology as well as the role that lexical aspect plays in the early use of tense morphology. It is suggested that although Greek-speaking children have not yet fully mapped the tense concepts to the correct tense morphology, tense acquisition does not seem to be significantly affected by the aspectual characteristics (i.e. the telicity) of the verb.
The aim of this paper is to give the semantic profile of the Greek verb-deriving suffixes -íz(o), -én(o), -év(o), -ón(o), -(i)áz(o), and -ín(o), with a special account of the ending -áo/-ó. The patterns presented are the result of an empirical analysis of data extracted from extended interviews conducted with 28 native Greek speakers in Athens, Greece in February 2009. In the first interview task the test persons were asked to force(=create) verbs by using the suffixes -ízo, -évo, -óno, -(i)ázo, and -íno and a variety of bases which conformed to the ontological distinctions made in Lieber (2004). In the second task the test persons were asked to evaluate three groups of forced verbs with a noun, an adjective, and an adverb, respectively, by using one (best/highly acceptable verb) to six (worst/unacceptable verb) points. In the third task nineteen established verb pairs with different suffixes and the ending -áo/-ó were presented. The test persons were asked to report whether there was some difference between them and what exactly this difference was. The differences reported were transformed into 16 alternations. In the fourth task 21 established verbs with different suffixes were presented. The test persons were asked to give the "opposite" or "near opposite" expression for each verb. The rationale behind this task was to arrive at the meaning of the suffixes through the semantics of the opposites. In the analysis Rochelle's Lieber's (2004) theoretical framework is used. The results of the analysis suggest (i) a sign-based treatment of affixes, (ii) a vertical preference structure in the semantic structure of the head suffixes which takes into account the semantic make-up of the bases, and (iii) the integration of socioexpressive meaning into verb structures.
Neugriechische Wortbildung
(1988)
Ziel dieser Arbeit ist es, einen Überblick über das ngr. Wortbildungssystem zu geben. und zugleich die wichtigsten Probleme, die mit der Abgrenzung der ,verschiedenen Wortbildungsverfahren voneinander im NGR. zusammenhängen, so weit wie möglich zu behandeln. Die Arbeit ist in drei Hauptteile gegliedert: der erste Teil (Kap. 2 und 3) ist allgemeinen Problemen gewidmet; die sich auf die Abgrenzung des Bereichs der Wortbildung von der Flexion sowie auf die wichtigsten Aspekte der Wortstruktur im NGR. beziehen. In den beiden .anderen Teilen (Kap. 4 und 5) werden die Wortbildungsverfahren der Ableitung und der Komposition im Bereich des Nomens und im Bereich des Verbs diskutiert. Eine ausführliche Darstellung der Präfixbildung im NGR. ist im Rahmen dieser Arbeit nicht möglich; jedoch werden die Probleme, die mit der Abgrenzung von Präfixbildungen und Komposita zusammenhängen, in Kap. 5.1 kurz besprochen. Besondere Arten der Wortbildung wie z.B. Akronymie, (Wort)Kürzung, "blending" werden nicht behandelt.
In this paper I present five alternations of the verb system of Modern Greek, which are recurrently mapped on the syntactic frame NPi__NP. The actual claim is that only the participation in alternations and/or the allocation to an alternation variant can reliably determine the relation between a verb derivative and its base. In the second part, the conceptual structures and semantic/situational fields of a large number of “-ízo” derivatives appearing inside alternation classes are presented. The restricted character of the conceptual and situational preferences inside alternations classes suggests the dominant character of the alternations component.