Part I
1: Rochelle Lieber and Pavol ^Stekauer: Introduction: The scope of
the handbooks
2: Pius ten Hacken: Delineating derivation and inflection
3: Susan Olsen: Delineating derivation and compounding
4: Rochelle Lieber: Theoretical approaches to derivation
5: Mark Aronoff and Mark Lindsay: Productivity, blocking, and
lexicalization
6: Rochelle Lieber: Methodological issues in studying
derivation
7: Harald Baayen: Experimental and psycholinguistic approaches
8: Laurie Bauer: Concatenative derivation
9: Juliette Blevins: Infixation
10: Salvador Valera: Conversion
11: Sharon Inkelas: Non-concatenative derivation: Reduplication
12: Stuart Davis and Natsuko Tsujimura: Non-concatenative
derivation: Other processes
13: Mary Paster: Allomorphy
14: Artemis Alexiadou: Nominal derivation
15: Andrew Koontz-Garboden: Verbal derivation
16: Antonio Fábregas: Adjectival and adverbial derivation
17: Livia Körtvélyessy: Evaluative derivation
18: Gregory Stump: Derivation and function words
19: Franz Rainer: Homophony versus polysemy in derivation
20: Pavol ^Stekauer: Derivational paradigms
21: Pauliina Saarinen and Jennifer Hay: Affix ordering in
derivation
22: Carola Trips: Derivation and historical change
23: Livia Körtvélyessy and Pavol ^Stekauer: Derivation in a social
context
24: Eve Clark: Acquisition of derivational morphology
Part II
25: Sailaja Pingali: Indo-European
26: Ferenc Kiefer and Johanna Laakso: Uralic
27: Irina Nikolaeva: Altaic
28: Edward J. Vajda: Yeniseian
29: Mark J. Alves: Mon-Khmer
30: Robert Blust: Austronesian
31: Denis Creissels: Niger-Congo
32: Erin Shay: Afro-Asiatic
33: Gerrit Dimmendaal: Nilo-Saharan
34: Karen Steffen Chung, Nathan W. Hill, and Jackson T.-S. Sun:
Sino-Tibetan
35: Jane Simpson: Pama-Nyungan
36: Keren Rice: Athabaskan
37: Alana Johns: Eskimo-Aleut
38: Gabriela Caballero: Uto-Aztecan
39: Verónica Nercesian: Matacoan
40: Bernd Heine: Areal tendencies in derivation
41: Rochelle Lieber and Pavol ^Stekauer: Universals in derivation
Rochelle Lieber is Professor of Linguistics at the University of
New Hampshire. Her interests include morphological theory,
especially derivation and compounding, lexical semantics, and the
morphology-syntax interface. She is the author of several books
including Morphology and Lexical Semantics (CUP, 2004), and
Introducing Morphology (CUP, 2010). She is the co-author, with
Laurie Bauer and Ingo Plag, of the Oxford Reference Guide to
English
Morphology (OUP, 2013). Pavol %Stekauer is Professor of English
linguistics at P.J. %Safárik University, Kosice, Slovakia. His
research has focused on an onomasiological approach to
word-formation, sociolinguistic aspects of
word-formation, meaning predictability of complex words, and
crosslinguistic research into word-formation. His publications
include An Onomasiological Theory of English Word-Formation (John
Benjamins, 1998), English Word-Formation. A History of Research
(1960-1995). Gunter Narr, 2000), and Meaning Predictability in
Word-Formation (John Benjamins, 2005).
Rochelle Lieber and Pavol %Stekauer are co-editors of two
handbooks: The Handbook of Word-formation (Springer, 2005) and The
Oxford Handbook of Compounding (OUP, 2009).
"All chapters sketch the richness of derivational phenomena
cross-linguistically"-- Alexandra Galani, Linguist List
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