Agglutinating language

From Glottopedia
Revision as of 19:28, 27 January 2008 by Luo (talk | contribs) (from Utrecht Lexicon of Linguistics)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Agglutinating language is a language which has a morphological system in which words as a rule are polymorphemic and where each morpheme corresponds to a single lexical meaning.

Examples

Classical examples of agglutinating languages are Turkish and Quechua.

(i) Turkish

ev- ler- i- den
house PL- POSS- ABL
'from their house'

(ii)Quechua

maqa- chi- naku- rka- n
beat CAUS- RECP- PL- 3
'They let each other be beaten.'

Comments

Next to agglutinating languages, one distinguishes (in)flectional languages, isolating languages, and polysynthetic languages. One basic assumption underlying this typology is that agglutination is the primary type of word formation, and that the other three types are deviations from it. This traditional classification of languages into four morphological groups has been criticized for being both incoherent and useless.

Link

Utrecht Lexicon of Linguistics

References

  • Anderson, S.R. 1985. Typological distinctions in Word-formation. In Shopen, T. (ed.) Language Typology and Grammatical Description, vol. 3. Cambridge: CUP.
  • Spencer, A. 1991. Morphological Theory. Blackwell, Oxford.