Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America, 2023
Claims that markedness influences morphological change do not fit attested patterns of suppletive... more Claims that markedness influences morphological change do not fit attested patterns of suppletive replacement in verb paradigms. Examination of all suppletion types and sources reveals that markedness considerations are weaker predictors of suppletion patterns than interparadigmatic relationships, intraparadigmatic relationships, and semantic connections.
Subordinate clauses with future time reference often feature verb forms that are not morphologica... more Subordinate clauses with future time reference often feature verb forms that are not morphologically encoded as future. I examine patterns of morphological encoding in Romance and Greek subordinate clauses with future time reference, including interactions among tense, aspect and mood. I also address the diachronic development of some of the systems in order to contribute to a greater understanding of the kinds of morphological mismatch that some languages show in such clauses.
Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society, 1996
Proceedings of the Twenty-Second Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society: General Sess... more Proceedings of the Twenty-Second Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society: General Session and Parasession on The Role of Learnability in Grammatical Theory (1996)
My project entails a one-month visit to Donostia-San Sebastian, Spain, to investigate the socioli... more My project entails a one-month visit to Donostia-San Sebastian, Spain, to investigate the sociolinguistic circumstances surrounding the relationships found in the vebal, nominal, and adjectival morphology of Basque and Spanish. Using personal interviews, media resources, ...
Catalan is unique among the Romance languages in having a relatively large number of speakers in ... more Catalan is unique among the Romance languages in having a relatively large number of speakers in a thriving speech community but not being the dominant language of a major nation-state. It is also unusual in that its position within the Romance subfamily is a matter of some debate. I argue that the application of the principle of contact linguistics to data from Catalan dialects, especially the Algueres variety, support rejecting the traditional treatment of Catalan as Ibero-Romance and Occitan as Gallo-Romance in favor of placing Catalan and Occitan together in a separate subbranch.
Tense and Aspect in Periphrastic Pasts: Evidence from Iberian Romance Matthew Lambert Juge B.A. (... more Tense and Aspect in Periphrastic Pasts: Evidence from Iberian Romance Matthew Lambert Juge B.A. (University o f Virginia) 1992 M.A. (University o f California, Berkeley) 1994 A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction o f the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Linguistics in the GRADUATE DIVISION o f the UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY Committee in charge: Professor Andrew Garrett, Chair Professor Gary B. Holland, Professor Thomas F. Shannon Spring 2002 Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
Diachronica International Journal For Historical Linguistics Revue Internationale Pour La Linguistique Historique Internationale Zeitschrift Fur Historische Sprachwissenschaft, 2006
This paper examines the semantic factors involved in three crucial questions about suppletion in ... more This paper examines the semantic factors involved in three crucial questions about suppletion in verbs: what verbs develop suppletion, what verbs contribute to suppletive paradigms, and how roots are distributed in suppletive paradigms. My analysis shows that the development of suppletion is more orderly than commonly believed. Specifically, semantic distance and other semantic factors facilitate explanations of suppletive patterns that earlier studies focusing on typological and morphological considerations could not account for. I apply semantic maps to well-known cases of suppletion in addition to underreported and previously unreported patterns, including Hungarian data displaying a previously unknown type of suppletion—non-aligned overlapping suppletion—where forms shared by separate lexemes belong to distinct parts of their paradigms. I contextualize semantic factors in the relationships between synchronic types and diachronic sources. My analysis refines our understanding of suppletion types and shows the logic behind suppletive distributions.
Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America, 2023
Claims that markedness influences morphological change do not fit attested patterns of suppletive... more Claims that markedness influences morphological change do not fit attested patterns of suppletive replacement in verb paradigms. Examination of all suppletion types and sources reveals that markedness considerations are weaker predictors of suppletion patterns than interparadigmatic relationships, intraparadigmatic relationships, and semantic connections.
Subordinate clauses with future time reference often feature verb forms that are not morphologica... more Subordinate clauses with future time reference often feature verb forms that are not morphologically encoded as future. I examine patterns of morphological encoding in Romance and Greek subordinate clauses with future time reference, including interactions among tense, aspect and mood. I also address the diachronic development of some of the systems in order to contribute to a greater understanding of the kinds of morphological mismatch that some languages show in such clauses.
Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society, 1996
Proceedings of the Twenty-Second Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society: General Sess... more Proceedings of the Twenty-Second Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society: General Session and Parasession on The Role of Learnability in Grammatical Theory (1996)
My project entails a one-month visit to Donostia-San Sebastian, Spain, to investigate the socioli... more My project entails a one-month visit to Donostia-San Sebastian, Spain, to investigate the sociolinguistic circumstances surrounding the relationships found in the vebal, nominal, and adjectival morphology of Basque and Spanish. Using personal interviews, media resources, ...
Catalan is unique among the Romance languages in having a relatively large number of speakers in ... more Catalan is unique among the Romance languages in having a relatively large number of speakers in a thriving speech community but not being the dominant language of a major nation-state. It is also unusual in that its position within the Romance subfamily is a matter of some debate. I argue that the application of the principle of contact linguistics to data from Catalan dialects, especially the Algueres variety, support rejecting the traditional treatment of Catalan as Ibero-Romance and Occitan as Gallo-Romance in favor of placing Catalan and Occitan together in a separate subbranch.
Tense and Aspect in Periphrastic Pasts: Evidence from Iberian Romance Matthew Lambert Juge B.A. (... more Tense and Aspect in Periphrastic Pasts: Evidence from Iberian Romance Matthew Lambert Juge B.A. (University o f Virginia) 1992 M.A. (University o f California, Berkeley) 1994 A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction o f the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Linguistics in the GRADUATE DIVISION o f the UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY Committee in charge: Professor Andrew Garrett, Chair Professor Gary B. Holland, Professor Thomas F. Shannon Spring 2002 Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
Diachronica International Journal For Historical Linguistics Revue Internationale Pour La Linguistique Historique Internationale Zeitschrift Fur Historische Sprachwissenschaft, 2006
This paper examines the semantic factors involved in three crucial questions about suppletion in ... more This paper examines the semantic factors involved in three crucial questions about suppletion in verbs: what verbs develop suppletion, what verbs contribute to suppletive paradigms, and how roots are distributed in suppletive paradigms. My analysis shows that the development of suppletion is more orderly than commonly believed. Specifically, semantic distance and other semantic factors facilitate explanations of suppletive patterns that earlier studies focusing on typological and morphological considerations could not account for. I apply semantic maps to well-known cases of suppletion in addition to underreported and previously unreported patterns, including Hungarian data displaying a previously unknown type of suppletion—non-aligned overlapping suppletion—where forms shared by separate lexemes belong to distinct parts of their paradigms. I contextualize semantic factors in the relationships between synchronic types and diachronic sources. My analysis refines our understanding of suppletion types and shows the logic behind suppletive distributions.
Subordinate clauses with future time reference often feature verb forms that are not morphologica... more Subordinate clauses with future time reference often feature verb forms that are not morphologically encoded as future. I examine patterns of morphological encoding in Romance and Greek subordinate clauses with future time reference, including interactions among tense, aspect and mood. I also address the diachronic development of some of the systems in order to contribute to a greater understanding of the kinds of morphological mismatch that some languages show in such clauses.
Uploads
Papers by Matthew L Juge
suppletive patterns that earlier studies focusing on typological and morphological considerations could not account for. I apply semantic maps to well-known cases of suppletion in addition to underreported and previously unreported patterns, including Hungarian data displaying a previously unknown type of suppletion—non-aligned overlapping suppletion—where forms shared by separate lexemes belong to distinct
parts of their paradigms. I contextualize semantic factors in the relationships between synchronic types and diachronic sources. My analysis refines our understanding of suppletion types and shows the logic behind suppletive distributions.
suppletive patterns that earlier studies focusing on typological and morphological considerations could not account for. I apply semantic maps to well-known cases of suppletion in addition to underreported and previously unreported patterns, including Hungarian data displaying a previously unknown type of suppletion—non-aligned overlapping suppletion—where forms shared by separate lexemes belong to distinct
parts of their paradigms. I contextualize semantic factors in the relationships between synchronic types and diachronic sources. My analysis refines our understanding of suppletion types and shows the logic behind suppletive distributions.