A newly expanded and updated edition of one of the best-selling
introductions to linguistic morphology--the study and description of
word formations in languages--that deals with inflection, derivation,
and compounding, the system of word-forming elements and processes in a
language. Basic concepts are introduced, with an abundance of examples
from a range of familiar and exotic languages, followed by a discussion
of, among other topics, the definition of word-form, productivity,
inflection versus derivation, and the position of morphology to
phonology--the science of speech sounds, especially the history and
theory of sound changes in a language. Along with two new chapters
discussing morphology and the brain and how morphology arises, changes,
and disappears, this new edition includes exercises and a glossary of
key terms.