Unisa Institutional Repository

The significance of absence:The case of zero and empty morphs.

Show full item record

Title: The significance of absence:The case of zero and empty morphs.
Author: Kosch, Ingeborg M.
Abstract: The morpheme is generaliy understood as a unit which has form as well as content, i.e. a physical substance (phonological and phonetic) and a meaning or function within a grammatical system. With reference to examples from Northem Sotho and Zulu, this article demonstrates that zero morphs and empty morphs, as realizations of morphemes, fail to comply in one way or another with the above-mentioned characteristics posited for morphemes. Zero morphs lack a physical form, while empty morphs lack a meaning. These facts render the recognition of zero morphs and empty morphs somewhat controversial, but many linguists nevertheless tind it convenient to identify such morphs in their analyses.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10500/5765
Date: 2004
Citation: Kosch,Ingeborg.The significance of absence:The case of zero and empty morphs.South African Journal of African Languages,vol.24,no.4, 2004.pp.245-251.


Files in this item

Files Size Format View
Kosch SAJAL 2004,4,pp.245.pdf 538.3Kb PDF View/Open

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show full item record

Search UnisaIR


Browse

My Account

Statistics