Phonological familiarity or morphological constraint?
Iris Berent | Department of Psychology, Florida Atlantic University
Steven Pinker | Department of Psychology, Harvard University
English speakers disfavor compounds containing regular plurals compared to irregular ones. Haskell, MacDonald and Seidenberg (2003) attribute this phenomenon to the rarity of compounds containing words with the phonological properties of regular plurals. Five experiments test this proposal. Experiment 1 demonstrated that novel regular plurals (e.g., loonks-eater) are disliked in compounds compared to irregular plurals with illicit (hence less frequent) phonological patterns (e.g., leevk-eater, plural of loovk). Experiments 2–3 found that people show no dispreference for compounds containing nouns that merely sound like regular plurals (e.g., hose-installer vs. pipe-installer). Experiments 4–5 showed a robust effect of morphological regularity when phonological familiarity was controlled: Compounds containing regular plural nonwords (e.g., gleeks-hunter, plural of gleek) were disfavored relative to irregular, phonologically-identical, plurals (e.g., breex-container, plural of broox). The dispreference for regular plurals inside compounds thus hinges on the morphological distinction between irregular and regular forms and it is irreducible to phonological familiarity.
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이생근
2016. The Use of Regular Plural Modifiers within English Noun Compounds. The Linguistic Association of Korea Journal 24:4 ► pp. 375 ff.
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2015. Producing morphologically complex words: An ERP study with children and adults. Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience 12 ► pp. 51 ff.
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Seidenberg, Mark S. & David C. Plaut
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2013. Preference for linking element -en- in Dutch noun-noun compounds: native speakers and second language learners of Dutch. Morphology 23:1 ► pp. 33 ff.
Berent, Iris, Amanda Dupuis, Diane Brentari & Steven Pinker
2013. Amodal Aspects of Linguistic Design. PLoS ONE 8:4 ► pp. e60617 ff.
Clahsen, Harald, Loay Balkhair, John-Sebastian Schutter & Ian Cunnings
2013. The time course of morphological processing in a second language. Second Language Research 29:1 ► pp. 7 ff.
Hanssen, Esther, Arina Banga, Robert Schreuder & Anneke Neijt
2013. Semantic and prosodic effects of Dutch linking elements. Morphology 23:1 ► pp. 7 ff.
Silva, Renita, Sabrina Gerth & Harald Clahsen
2013. Morphological constraints in children’s spoken language comprehension: A visual world study of plurals inside compounds in English. Cognition 129:2 ► pp. 457 ff.
Berent, Iris, Colin Wilson, Gary F. Marcus & Douglas K. Bemis
2012. On the Role of Variables in Phonology: Remarks on Hayes and Wilson 2008. Linguistic Inquiry 43:1 ► pp. 97 ff.
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2011. Learning language from the input: Why innate constraints can’t explain noun compounding. Cognitive Psychology 62:1 ► pp. 1 ff.
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