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Last update:
9 February 2010

© John Benjamins
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Suppletion in Verb Paradigms

Bits and pieces of the puzzle

Ljuba N. Veselinova
Stockholm University, Sweden

2006. xviii, 236 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 2979 3 / EUR 115.00 / USD 173.00
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e-BookAvailable from e-book platforms
978 90 272 9326 8 / EUR 115.00 / USD 173.00
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This book examines stem change in verb paradigms, as in English go 'go.PRESENT' vs. went 'go.PAST', a phenomenon referred to as suppletion in current linguistic theory. The work is based on a broad sample of 193 languages, and examines this long neglected phenomenon from a typological perspective. In addition to identifying types of suppletion which occur cross-linguistically, the study brings to light areal patterns of the occurrence of suppletive forms in verb paradigms. Several hypotheses as regards the diachronic development of suppletive forms are presented as well. The author also seeks to explore the methodological issues of evaluating the frequency of linguistic features in large language samples by introducing a method of weighting languages according to their genetic relatedness. All figures obtained in this way are compared to the proportions yielded by more familiar counting methods, and the results and implications of the different procedures are compared and discussed throughout.


Table of contents

Acknowldegments
ix–x
Abbreviations and presentation conventions
xi–xiii
Introduction
xv–xvii
Chapter 1: Previous studies on suppletion
1–31
Chapter 2: Method
33–49
Chapter 3: Some theoretical issues and a general overview of the data
51–61
Chapter 4: Tense-aspect suppletion I: Synchronic perspective
63–95
Chapter 5: Tense-aspect suppletion II: Diachronic and usage-based perspective
97–134
Chapter 6: Suppletive Imperatives
135–147
Chapter 7: Verbal number and suppletion
149–173
Concluding remarks
175–178
Appendices
179–214
References
215–229
Index of languages
231–232
Index of authors
233–234
Index of subjects
235


This book is the fruit of much solid and useful work. Having read it, I have a much clearer idea than before of where suppletion typically does and does not crop up, within the domain Veselinova investigates. And its incidence is by no means haphazard.
Andrew Carstairs-McCarty, University of Canterbury, on Linguist List Vol. 18-209, 2006