Found:
Level
MORPHOLOGY: term first introduced in Allen (1978) to express the idea
that different types of word formation rules and phonological rules take place in linearly ordered blocks. The idea of levels and level ordering has played a
central role in the development of the framework of
Lexical Morphology.
EXAMPLE: English has two types of affixes:
stress shifting affixes (= Class I affixes) and
stress neutral affixes (= Class II affixes). To account for this, it is assumed that Class I affixation takes place at level I, while Class II affixation takes place at the later Level II. The words derived at Level I undergo
the phonological rules of this level, while the words derived at Level II can no longer undergo these phonological rules. More recently the term 'Level' is replaced
by the term stratum.
LIT. | Allen, M.R. (1978) Halle, M. & K.P. Mohanan (1985) Kiparsky, P. (1982) Siegel, D. (1974) Spencer, A. (1991) |