Incorporation (linguistics)
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In
linguistics Linguistics is the science, scientific study of human language. It is called a scientific study because it entails a comprehensive, systematic, objective, and precise analysis of all aspects of language, particularly its nature and structure ...
, incorporation is a phenomenon by which a
grammatical category In linguistics, a grammatical category or grammatical feature is a property of items within the grammar of a language. Within each category there are two or more possible values (sometimes called grammemes), which are normally mutually exclusiv ...
, such as a
verb A verb () is a word ( part of speech) that in syntax generally conveys an action (''bring'', ''read'', ''walk'', ''run'', ''learn''), an occurrence (''happen'', ''become''), or a state of being (''be'', ''exist'', ''stand''). In the usual descr ...
, forms a
compound Compound may refer to: Architecture and built environments * Compound (enclosure), a cluster of buildings having a shared purpose, usually inside a fence or wall ** Compound (fortification), a version of the above fortified with defensive struc ...
with its
direct object In linguistics, an object is any of several types of arguments. In subject-prominent, nominative-accusative languages such as English, a transitive verb typically distinguishes between its subject and any of its objects, which can include but ...
(object incorporation) or
adverb An adverb is a word or an expression that generally modifies a verb, adjective, another adverb, determiner, clause, preposition, or sentence. Adverbs typically express manner, place, time, frequency, degree, level of certainty, etc., answering ...
ial modifier, while retaining its original syntactic function. The inclusion of a noun qualifies the verb, narrowing its scope rather than making reference to a specific entity. Incorporation is central to many
polysynthetic language In linguistic typology, polysynthetic languages, formerly holophrastic languages, are highly synthetic languages, i.e. languages in which words are composed of many morphemes (word parts that have independent meaning but may or may not be able ...
s such as those found in North America, Siberia and northern Australia. However, polysynthesis does not necessarily imply incorporation (Mithun 2009), and the presence of incorporation does not imply that the language is polysynthetic.


Examples of incorporation


English

Although incorporation does not occur regularly, English uses it sometimes: ''breastfeed'', and
direct object In linguistics, an object is any of several types of arguments. In subject-prominent, nominative-accusative languages such as English, a transitive verb typically distinguishes between its subject and any of its objects, which can include but ...
incorporation, as in ''babysit''. Etymologically, such verbs in English are usually
back-formation In etymology, back-formation is the process or result of creating a new word via inflection, typically by removing or substituting actual or supposed affixes from a lexical item, in a way that expands the number of lexemes associated with the ...
s: the verbs ''breastfeed'' and ''babysit'' are formed from the adjective ''breast-fed'' and the noun ''babysitter'' respectively. Incorporation and plain compounding may be fuzzy categories: consider ''backstabbing'', ''name-calling'', ''axe murder''.


Oneida

The following example from Oneida (
Iroquoian The Iroquoian languages are a language family of indigenous peoples of North America. They are known for their general lack of labial consonants. The Iroquoian languages are polysynthetic and head-marking. As of 2020, all surviving Iroquoian ...
) illustrates noun incorporation. In this example, the verbal root ''hninu'' appears with its usual verbal morphology: a factive marker (FACT), which very roughly translates as past tense, although this is not quite accurate; an agreement marker (1.SG), which tells us that the verb agrees with 1st person singular (the speaker); and an aspect marker, punctual (PUNC), which tells us that this is a completed event. The direct object ''ne kanaktaʼ'' follows the verb. The function of the particle ''ne'' is to determine the bed: in the example, I bought this specific bed. Note that the word for bed consists of a root ''nakt'' plus a prefix and a suffix. The notion of the root is important here, but the properties of the prefix and suffix do not matter for this discussion. In the following sentence, the bed is unspecified. Unspecified nouns can be incorporated, thus creating a general statement. In this example: I bought a bed (and not a specific bed). In a broader sense, depending on context, it can even mean that I am a bed buyer, as in: I am a trader of beds, buying beds is my profession. In this example, the root for bed ''nakt'' has ''incorporated'' into the verbal construction and appears before the verbal root. Two other incidental changes are noticed here. First, the agreement marker in the first example is ''k'' and in the second example is ''ke''. These are two phonologically-conditioned allomorphs. In other words, the choice between using ''k'' and ''ke'' is based on the other sounds in the word (and has nothing to do with noun incorporation). Also, there is an
epenthetic In phonology, epenthesis (; Greek ) means the addition of one or more sounds to a word, especially in the beginning syllable ('' prothesis'') or in the ending syllable (''paragoge'') or in-between two syllabic sounds in a word. The word ''epent ...
vowel ''a'' between the nominal and verbal roots. This vowel is inserted to break up an illegal consonant cluster (and also has nothing to do with noun incorporation).


Panare

The next example, from Panare, illustrates the cross-linguistically common phenomenon that the incorporated form of a noun may be significantly different from its unincorporated form. The first sentence contains the incorporated form ''u''' of "head", and the second its unincorporated form ''ipu'':


Chukchi

Chukchi, a Chukotko-Kamchatkan language spoken in North Eastern Siberia, provides a wealth of examples of noun incorporation. The phrase ''təpelarkən qoraŋə'' means "I'm leaving the reindeer" and has two words (the verb in the first person singular, and the noun). The same idea can be expressed with the single word ''təqorapelarkən'', in which the noun root ''qora-'' "reindeer" is incorporated into the verb word.


Mohawk

Mohawk Mohawk may refer to: Related to Native Americans * Mohawk people, an indigenous people of North America (Canada and New York) *Mohawk language, the language spoken by the Mohawk people * Mohawk hairstyle, from a hairstyle once thought to have been ...
, an
Iroquoian language The Iroquoian languages are a language family of indigenous peoples of North America. They are known for their general lack of labial consonants. The Iroquoian languages are polysynthetic and head-marking. As of 2020, all surviving Iroquoian ...
, makes heavy use of incorporation, as in: ''watia'tawi'tsherí:io'' "it is a good shirt", where the noun
root In vascular plants, the roots are the organs of a plant that are modified to provide anchorage for the plant and take in water and nutrients into the plant body, which allows plants to grow taller and faster. They are most often below the su ...
''atia'tawi'' "upper body garment" is present inside the verb.


Cheyenne

Cheyenne The Cheyenne ( ) are an Indigenous people of the Great Plains. Their Cheyenne language belongs to the Algonquian language family. Today, the Cheyenne people are split into two federally recognized nations: the Southern Cheyenne, who are enr ...
, an Algonquian language of the plains, also uses noun incorporation on a regular basis. Consider ''nátahpe'emaheona'', meaning "I have a big house", which contains the noun morpheme ''maheo'' "house".


Chinese (Mandarin)

Chinese makes extensive use of ''verb-object compounds'', which are compounds composed of two constituents having the syntactic relation of verb and its direct object. For example, the verb 'sleep (VO)' is composed of the verb 'sleep (V)' and the bound morpheme object 'sleep (N)'. Aspect markers (e.g. PERFECTIVE), classifier phrases (e.g. THREE + CL + hours), and other elements may separate the two constituents of these compounds, though different verb-object compounds vary in degree of separability.


Semantics of noun incorporation

In many cases, a phrase with an incorporated noun carries a different meaning with respect to the equivalent phrase where the noun is not incorporated into the verb. The difference seems to hang around the generality and definiteness of the statement. The incorporated phrase is usually generic and indefinite, while the non-incorporated one is more specific. In
Yucatec Maya Yucatec Maya (; referred to by its speakers simply as Maya or as , is one of the 32 Mayan languages of the Mayan language family. Yucatec Maya is spoken in the Yucatán Peninsula and northern Belize. There is also a significant diasporic commu ...
, for example, the phrase "I chopped a tree", when the word for "tree" is incorporated, changes its meaning to "I chopped wood". In Lahu (a
Tibeto-Burman language The Tibeto-Burman languages are the non-Sinitic members of the Sino-Tibetan language family, over 400 of which are spoken throughout the Southeast Asian Massif ("Zomia") as well as parts of East Asia and South Asia. Around 60 million people spe ...
), the definite phrase "I drink the liquor" becomes the more general "I drink liquor" when "liquor" is incorporated. The
Japanese Japanese may refer to: * Something from or related to Japan, an island country in East Asia * Japanese language, spoken mainly in Japan * Japanese people, the ethnic group that identifies with Japan through ancestry or culture ** Japanese diaspor ...
phrase 目を覚ます ''me o samasu'' means "to wake up" or literally ''to wake (one's) eyes''. But when the direct object is incorporated into the nominal form of the verb, the resulting noun 目覚まし ''mezamashi'' literally means "waking up", as in 目覚まし時計 ''mezamashidokei'' meaning "alarm clock." This tendency is not a rule. There are languages where noun incorporation does not produce a meaning change (though it may cause a change in syntax — as explained below).


Syntax of noun incorporation


What is noun incorporation?

An influential definition of noun incorporation (NI) by Sapir (1911) and Mithun (1984) has stated that NI is “a construction in which a noun and a verb stem combine to yield a complex verb.” Due to the wide variation in how noun incorporation presents itself in different languages, however, it is difficult to create an agreed upon and all-encompassing definition. As a result, most syntacticians have focused on generating definitions that apply to the languages they have studied, regardless of whether or not they are cross-linguistically attested. Noun incorporation can interact with the transitivity of the verb it applies to in two different ways. In some languages, the incorporated noun deletes one of the
arguments An argument is a statement or group of statements called premises intended to determine the degree of truth or acceptability of another statement called conclusion. Arguments can be studied from three main perspectives: the logical, the dialectic ...
of the verb, and this is shown explicitly: if the verb is transitive, the derived verb word with an incorporated noun (which functions as the direct object) becomes formally intransitive and is marked as such. In other languages this change does not take place, or at least it is not shown by explicit morphology. A recent study found out that across languages, morphosyntactically highly transitive verbs and patientive intransitive verbs are most likely to perform noun incorporation. Incorporation looks at whether verb arguments, its nominal complements, exist on the same syntactic level or not. Incorporation is characterized as a stem combination meaning it combines independent lexical items into a modal or auxiliary verb to ultimately form a complex verb. The stem of the verb will be the determiner of the new category in which the incorporation belongs to and the noun which was incorporated drops its own categorical features and grammatical markings, if employed. This is done by the movement of the incorporated noun to its new position in syntax. When participating in noun incorporation, it allows for the speaker to represent an alternative expression to further explain and shift focus to the information being presented (Mithun 1984). Although incorporation exists in many languages, incorporation is optional and non-obligatory. Incorporation is restricted to certain noun categories; namely on the degree to which they are animate or alive or suppletive forms. If a language participates in productive compounding it does not allow for incorporation. An example of a compounding language is German. Respectively, if a language participates in incorporation it does not allow for productive compounding. The most common type of NI is where the incorporated noun acts as the notional subject of the clause. This can be observed in Onondaga, Southern Tiwa and Koryak.


Types of noun incorporation

In 1985, Mithun introduced a four type system to define the functionality and progression of noun incorporation in a language. This system is important as many discuss this, and it is widely applied to explain the differences in NI in languages. The four types are: # Lexical compounding: involves a verb incorporating a nominal argument. The resulting compound usually describes a noteworthy or recurring activity. The noun in these compounds are not commonly marked for definiteness or number. # Manipulation of case roles: The second type uses the same process to manipulate case roles, incorporating the argument into the verb to allow for a new argument to take its place. # Manipulation of discourse structure: The third type uses noun incorporation to background old or established information. A speaker might explicitly mention an entity once, for example, and thereafter refer to it using an incorporated verbal compound. This kind of noun incorporation is usually seen in polysynthetic languages. # Classificatory Incorporation: The fourth and final type proposed by Mithun involves the development of a set of classificatory compounds, in which verbs are paired with generic nouns to describe properties of an entity, rather than the entity itself. According to Mithun, languages exhibiting any of these types always display all of the lower types as well. This seems to imply a pattern of progression, as Mithun describes in her 1984 paper on the evolution of noun incorporation. It is argued that it is necessary to distinguish at least two types of noun incorporation.


Accounts for noun incorporation

A large field of inquiry is whether NI is a syntactic process (verb and noun originate in different nodes and come together through syntactic means, a lexical process (word formation rules that apply in the lexicon dictate NI), or a combined process which investigates the which aspects of noun incorporation can be productively created through general syntactic rules and which must be specified in the lexicon. Of course, this will vary by language as some languages (primarily polysynthetic ones) allow for incorporated structures in a wide variety of sentences whereas in languages such as English, this incorporation is more limited. Theories of morphology-syntax interaction and the debate between syntactic and lexical accounts of NI should strive to be restrictive enough to account for the stable properties of NI in a unified way, but also account for language-specific variations. Within this section, we will focus on describing the influential syntactic and combined approaches to NI, though it is important to note that highly influential lexical accounts, such as Rosen's (1989) paper do exist. One highly influential syntactic account for NI is the head movement process proposed by Baker (1988). This account states that this NI head movement is distinct from but similar to the better-established phenomenon of phrase movement and involves the movement of a head noun out of object position and into a position where it adjoins to a governing verb. An example of this movement can be seen in figure 1 where the head noun 'baby' is moved out of the object N position to become incorporated with the verb as the sister to the verb 'sit'. While this theory does not account for every language, it does provide a starting point for subsequent syntactic analyses of NI, both with and without head movement. A more recent paper by Baker (2007) addresses a number of other influential accounts including Massam’s pseudo-incorporation, Van Geenhoven’s base generation, and Koopman and Szabolcsi’s small phrase movement. It was concluded that while each have their strong points, they all fail to answer some important questions, thus requiring the continued use of Baker's head movement account. Others, including Barrrie and Mattieu (2016) have argued against Baker’s  head movement hypothesis. They have investigated Onondaga and Ojibwe and proposed that phrasal movement rather than head movement can account for NI in a number of languages (including Mohawk).


Examples of noun incorporation from languages


Polysynthetic languages

A
polysynthetic language In linguistic typology, polysynthetic languages, formerly holophrastic languages, are highly synthetic languages, i.e. languages in which words are composed of many morphemes (word parts that have independent meaning but may or may not be able ...
is a language in which multiple morphemes, including affixes are often present within a single word. Each word can therefore express the meaning of full clauses or phrase and this structure has implications on how noun incorporation is exhibited in the languages in which it's observed.


= Lakhota

= In Lakhota, a
Siouan language Siouan or Siouan–Catawban is a language family of North America that is located primarily in the Great Plains, Ohio and Mississippi valleys and southeastern North America with a few other languages in the east. Name Authors who call the entire ...
of the plains, for example, the phrase "the man is chopping wood" can be expressed either as a transitive ''wičháša kiŋ čháŋ kiŋ kaksáhe'' ("man the wood the chopping") or as an intransitive ''wičháša kiŋ čhaŋkáksahe'' ("man the wood-chopping") in which the independent nominal ''čháŋ'', "wood," becomes a root incorporated into the verb: "wood-chopping."


= Mohawk

= Mohawk is an
Iroquoian language The Iroquoian languages are a language family of indigenous peoples of North America. They are known for their general lack of labial consonants. The Iroquoian languages are polysynthetic and head-marking. As of 2020, all surviving Iroquoian ...
in which noun incorporation occurs. NI is a very salient property of Northern Iroquoian languages including Mohawk and is seen unusually often in comparison to other languages. Noun incorporation in Mohawk involves the compounding of a noun stem with a verb stem to form a new verb stem. Only the noun stem is incorporated into the verb in NI, not the whole noun word. Mohawk grammar allows for whole propositions to be expressed by one word, which is classified as a verb. Other core elements, namely nouns (subjects, objects, etc.) can be incorporated into the verb. Well-formed verb phrases contain at the bare minimum a verb root and a pronominal prefix. The rest of the elements (and therefore noun incorporation) are optional. In the example sentences below, one can see the original sentence in 1a and the same sentence with noun incorporation into the verb in 1b where instead of "bought a bed," the literal translation of the sentence is "bed-bought." It is true in Mohawk, as it is in many languages, that the direct object of a transitive verb can incorporate, but the subject of a transitive verb cannot. This can be seen in the examples below as the well-formed sentence in 2a involves the incorporation of ''na'tar'' (bread), the direct object of the transitive verb ''kwetar'' (cut). Example 2b represents a sentence that is ill-formed as it cannot possess the same meaning as 2a ('this knife cuts bread'). This is because the subject of the transitive verb, ''a'shar'' (knife), is being incorporated into the verb which is not attested in Mohawk. Further, a unique feature of Mohawk is that fact that this language allows for noun incorporation into intransitives as illustrated in example sentence 3. ''Hri (shatter) is an intransitive verb which the noun stem ks (dish) is being incorporated into, producing a well-formed sentence. Another feature of Mohawk which is not as commonly attested cross-linguistically is that Mohawk allows a demonstrative, numeral, or adjective outside the complex verb to be interpreted as a modifier of the incorporated noun. Example sentence 4 illustrates this below. Here, the demonstrative ''thinkv'' (that) refers to and therefore modifies the incorporated noun ''ather'' (basket). According to Mithun's (1984) theory of noun incorporation classification, Mohawk is generally considered a type IV language because the incorporated noun modifies the internal argument. As a result of this classification, NI is Mohawk can follow any of the four structures listed in Mithun's paper including lexical compounding, manipulation of case roles, manipulation of discourse structure, and classificatory incorporation. Baker, Aranovich, & Golluscio claim that the structure of NI in Mohawk is the result of noun movement in the syntax. This is an extension of Baker's head movement hypothesis which is described above. The differences that Mohawk displays as compared to other languages therefore depends on whether or not the person, number, and gender features are retained in the ‘trace’ of the noun, the trace being the position from where the noun moved from object position before adjoinig to the governing verb. Figure 2 illustrates a simplified syntax tree of noun incorporation in Mohawk following Baker's head movement hypothesis. Here, the noun ''-wir-'' (baby) is moved from the object N position to become incorporated with the verb as the sister to the verb ''-núhwe'-'' (to like). Please note that some details were not included in this tree for illustrative purposes.


= Oneida

= In the
Oneida language Oneida (, autonym: /onʌjotaʔaːka/, /onʌjoteʔaːkaː/, /onʌjotaʔaːka/, People of the Standing Stone, Latilutakowa, Ukwehunwi, Nihatiluhta:ko) is an Iroquoian language spoken primarily by the Oneida people in the U.S. states of New York an ...
(an
Iroquoian language The Iroquoian languages are a language family of indigenous peoples of North America. They are known for their general lack of labial consonants. The Iroquoian languages are polysynthetic and head-marking. As of 2020, all surviving Iroquoian ...
spoken in Southern Ontario and Wisconsin), one finds classifier noun incorporation, in which a generic noun acting as a direct object can be incorporated into a verb, but a more specific direct object is left in place. In a rough translation, one would say for example "I animal-bought this pig", where "animal" is the generic incorporated noun. Note that this "classifier" is not an actual classifier (i.e. a class agreement morpheme) but a common noun.


= Cherokee

= Cherokee language is a language spoken by the Cherokee people, and is an Iroquoian language. Noun incorporation in Cherokee is very limited and the cases are lexicalized. All of the noun incorporation in Cherokee involves a body part word and few nouns, and to make up for the lack of NI, Cherokee has a system of classificatory verbs with five distinct categories.


Non-polysynthetic languages


= English

= English exhibits noun incorporation in a way that's different from the polysynthetic languages described above. Noun incorporation is not traditionally and commonly used in English, although over time it has been incorporated into the language for productiveness. The following examples show usage of productive noun-incorporation. Productive noun incorporation cannot be pluralized in English and cannot include any additions of higher elements such as determiners, quantifiers or adjuncts. The following examples show impossible noun incorporation cases for the sentence ''Will enjoys watch-collecting'' Noun incorporation in English is namely used by incorporating a type of noun with a verb to form a new verb through the process of lexical compounding. Noun compounding exists in lexical items where nouns have a recognizable concept to alter the semantics of a verb.The ability of the incorporation of nouns altering the syntactic and semantics of a verb is known as an incorporation complex. The incorporation becomes a valency-changing factor to the word which either decreases or increases verb valency. In English, it is most common for an argument or an
actant In narrative theory, actant is a term from the actantial model of semiotic analysis of narratives. The term also has uses in linguistics, sociology, computer programming theory, and astrology. In narratology Algirdas Julien Greimas (1917–1992), ...
to be incorporated with the predicate. It is shown that the addition of an actant results in additional connotations and metaphorical meanings. E.g., house-hunt. Although this may make the semantics more complex than it originally was, it simplifies the syntactic structure of the sentence by incorporating the actant-sender ''house''. There are 3 different types of noun incorporation compounding: lexical compounding, composition by juxtaposition and morphological compounding. English participates in lexical compounding. Lexical compounding: Lexical compounding in English exists to categorize an entity, quality or activity that deserves its own name. For example bus money, or mountain-climbing. Though, if mountain-climbing was not an institutional activity, the language may not recognize such activity. In this form of compounding a noun adds itself to a host verb and forms a new verb. The noun drops its syntactic features. English tends to undergo transmutation forming denominal verbs in the language. In the listed examples above, the incorporation of the actant does not possess a separate syntactic position in the verbs. The following illustrates the three sources of incorporation in English and corresponding examples: In the listed examples above, the incorporation of the actant possesses a separate syntactic position in the verbs.


= Hungarian

= Hungarian is an Uralic language in which many different types of noun incorporation occur. Hungarian's linguistic typology is agglutinative, meaning that the languages have words that consists of more than one morphemes. Hungarian combines "bare noun + verb" to form a new complex verb, and this would correspond to Mithun's first type of NI, lexical compounding. Phonologically, the V and N are separate words, but in syntactically, the N loses its syntactic status as the argument of the sentence, and VN unit becomes an intransitive predicate. This is demonstrated in the examples below: To be clear, to 'house-build' is not the same as to 'build a house.' 'house-building' is a complex activity and a unitary concept, and this is applied to other examples as well. The object argument of the underlying verb may be satisfied by the bare noun, but the bare noun does not act as an argument of a sentence like it usually would. In Hungarian, for examples such as one mentioned, the incorporating verb must be imperfective and the complex verb formed from it always must be intransitive. In Hungarian, incorporated nominals may be morphologically singular or plural - this is dependent on whether languages allow this or not in their incorporation. One restriction that Hungarian forbids is that bare object nouns cannot be incorporated with prefixed verbs. Another restriction that Hungarian does not allow is stative verbs cannot allow noun incorporation, even if the stative verbs are not prefixed verbs. However, it is important note that there are some unprefixed verbs that are perfective and allows NI in Hungarian.


= Korean

= Korean, national language of South Korea and North Korea, is part of Koreanic language family and also has noun incoporation. Specifically, Korean obeys the Head Movement Constraint by Baker (1988) that was discussed in the prior section. Korean has incorporated nouns in the structure of + VStem + AN1(i)which is different that the normal N + V like in English. AN is an affix in this case. In Korean, the noun, the head of the preceding NP, moves to the head of the VP to form a syntactic compound. Then the complex VP moves up to the right of the nominal head position where is '-i' is base-generated.


References


Further reading

*Baker, Mark C. (1996)
The Polysynthesis Parameter"> The Polysynthesis Parameter
New York tc. Oxford University Press. *Baker, Mark C. (1988
Incorporation: a theory of grammatical function changing
Chicago:. University of Chicago Press. * Evans, Nicholas & Hans-Jürgen Sasse (eds.). (2002). Problems of Polysynthesis. Berlin : Akademie Verlag. * Kroeber, Alfred L. (1909). Noun incorporation in American languages. In F. Heger (Ed.), ''XVI Internationaler Amerikanisten-Kongress'' (pp. 569–576). Vienna: Hartleben. *Kroeber, Alfred L. (1911)
Incorporation as a linguistic process
''American Anthropologist'', ''13'' (4), 577–584.

* Diane Massam, Massam, Diane. (2001). Pseudo noun incorporation in Niuean. '' Natural Language and Linguistic Theory'', ''19'' (1), 153–197. * Mithun, Marianne. (1984)
The evolution of noun incorporation
''Language'', ''60'' (4), 847-895.

*Mithun, M. (1985). Diachronic morphologization: The circumstances surrounding the birth, growth, and decline of noun incorporation. ''Papers from the Sixth International Conference on Historical Linguistics. ''Current Issues in Linguistic Theory 6. Jacek Fisiak, ed. Amsterdam-Poznan: John Benjamins-Adam Mickiewicz University, 365–394. *Mithun, Marianne. (1986)
On the nature of noun incorporation
''Language'', ''62'' (1), 32–38

*Mithun, Marianne. (2009
Polysynthesis in the arctic
In: Mahieu, M.-A., Tersis, N. (Eds.), ''Variations on Polysynthesis, The Eskaleut Languages''. Benjamins, Amsterdam, pp. 3–18

*Mattissen, Johanna. (2006
The ontology and diachrony of polysynthesis
In: Wunderlich, D. (Ed.), ''Advances in the Theory of the Lexicon''. Mouton de Gruyter, Berlin/New York, pp. 287–354. *Payne, Thomas E. ''Describing Morphosyntax'', Cambridge University Press, 1997. *Rosen, Sara T. (1989)
Two types of noun incorporation: A lexical analysis
''Language'', ''65'' (2), 294–317. * Jerrold Sadock, Sadock, Jerrold M. (1980)
Noun incorporation in Greenlandic: A case of syntactic word-formation
''Language'', ''57'' (2), 300–319. *Sadock, Jerrold M. (1986)
Some notes on noun incorporation
''Language'', ''62'' (1), 19–31. * Sapir, Edward. (1911)
The problem of noun incorporation in American languages
''American Anthropologist'', ''13'' (2), 250–282. * Van Valin, Robert D. &
Randy LaPolla Randy John LaPolla () is a professor and former Head of Division at thDivision of Linguistics and Multilingual Studiesin Nanyang Technological University. He is also a Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities, elected 2008. He is curren ...
. (1997).
Syntax: Structure, meaning and function
'. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. * Conlang: Advanced Polysynthesis (Wikibooks)
Lexicon of Linguistics
*Michael Jonathan Mathew Barri
Dynamic Antisymmetry and the Syntax of noun Incorporation
*Van Valin & LaPolla:1997 {{DEFAULTSORT:Incorporation (Linguistics) Linguistic typology Transitivity and valency