In a field still dominated by syntactic perspectives, it is easy to
overlook the words that are the irreducible building blocks of language.
Morphological Perspectives takes words as the starting point for any
questions about linguistic structure: their form, their internal
structure, their paradigmatic extensions, and their role in expressing
and manipulating syntactic configurations. With a team of authors that
run the typological gamut of languages, this book examines these
questions from multiple perspectives, both the canonical and the
non-canonical. By taking these questions seriously, and letting loose a
full battery of analytical techniques, the following chapters not only
celebrate the pioneering work of Greville G. Corbett but present new
thinking on traditional approaches, including the paradigm, deponency
and morphological features.