Table of contents
List of contributors
Introduction: In honor of Aslı Göksel: A critical mind who challenges assumptions, a creative thinker who transcends boundaries
1
Part I.Within boundaries: The word
Abstraction vs. analogy in the Turkish aorist
13
Word formation through derivation vs. compounding: Perspectives from child language acquisition of Turkish
39
Part II.Across boundaries: Morphological complexity and syntax
Restrictive relative clauses in the Greek dialects of Pharasa and Cappadocia
63
Person indexing in Sauzini: subject vs. non-subject markers
93
Subject marking of -DIK/-(y)AcAK complement clauses in written Turkish of the late Ottoman period (1860–1914)
121
Structure of plural pronoun constructions
155
Part III.Across boundaries: Morphological complexity and phonology
Paradigm leveling and regularization derive variation in stress: A corpus study on Turkish non-final stress at the morphology-phonology interface
193
The Great Divide: Parts of speech and their consequences for the phonological shape of Turkish words
211
Variability in the realization of agreement in Turkish: A morphotactic account
235
Same exponent, different strength: A gradient harmonic account of allomorphy in Greek
263
Morphosyntax-prosody mismatches in Karachay-Balkar: An analysis of narrow focus constructions
285
Part IV.Morphological complexity in Sign Languages
Aspects of clause structure and morphology in Turkish Sign Language
315
The universal quantifier ‘all’ in Turkish Sign Language
353
Null arguments in Turkish Sign Language
385
Index
419
This article is available free of charge.