Analogy in Contact: Modeling Maltese Plural Inflection
Court, Sara, Sims, Andrea D., Elsner, Micha
–arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Maltese is often described as having a hybrid morphological system resulting from extensive contact between Semitic and Romance language varieties. Such a designation reflects an etymological divide as much as it does a larger tradition in the literature to consider concatenative and non-concatenative morphological patterns as distinct in the language architecture. Using a combination of computational modeling and information theoretic methods, we quantify the extent to which the phonology and etymology of a Maltese singular noun may predict the morphological process (affixal vs. templatic) as well as the specific plural allomorph (affix or template) relating a singular noun to its associated plural form(s) in the lexicon. The results indicate phonological pressures shape the organization of the Maltese lexicon with predictive power that extends beyond that of a word's etymology, in line with analogical theories of language change in contact.
arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
May-20-2023
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- Europe
- Middle East > Malta (0.05)
- Netherlands > South Holland
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