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Interface Morphology in Ceramics
1987Modern ceramics find more and more technological applications as substitutes for metals. Normally these ceramics belong to the group of non-equilibrium multicomponent multiphase systems. Due to this state of non-equilibrium,chemical transport processes like diffusion within the phases and across the interface can occur during manufacturing or during ...
M. Backhaus-Ricoult, H. Schmalzried
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2019
AbstractThis chapter examines the place of morphology in the LFG architecture. The chapter assumes a modular view of the morphological component, in line with the overall modular architecture of LFG: the morphological component has its own internal structure and obeys universal and language particular constraints on word formation that need not be ...
Mary Dalrymple +2 more
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AbstractThis chapter examines the place of morphology in the LFG architecture. The chapter assumes a modular view of the morphological component, in line with the overall modular architecture of LFG: the morphological component has its own internal structure and obeys universal and language particular constraints on word formation that need not be ...
Mary Dalrymple +2 more
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Morphology of Au/GaAs interfaces
Applied Physics Letters, 1986The interface morphology of gold contacts on ultrahigh vacuum (UHV) cleaved, air-exposed, and chemically prepared GaAs surfaces has been studied by electron microscopy. Diodes formed on atomically clean cleaved (110) GaAs surfaces, subsequently annealed at 405 °C, were found to have flat interfaces.
Z. Liliental-Weber +4 more
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The morphology–syntax interface
2015The morphology-syntax interface (MSI) has historically been one of the most important and contentious interfaces in formal syntactic theory. This is not because morphology is somehow more important than the other linguistic realms but because the a priori assumptions about the nature of the MSI are often foundational to the architecture of the ...
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Distributed Morphology and the Syntax—Morphology Interface
2007A theory of the syntax/morphology interface is first, a theory of how ‘words’ and their internal structure – the traditional domain of morphology – relate to the structures generated by the syntax, and second, a theory of how the rules for deriving complex words relate to the rules for deriving syntactic structures. A prominent line of research in this
David Embick, Rolf Noyer
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Interface diffusion and precipitation morphology
Czechoslovak Journal of Physics, 1984Discussion de quelques aspects cinetiques agissant sur la morphologie des precipites (diffusion interfaciale isotrope ou anisotrope, etc.) pour des cristaux d'halogenures alcalins a structure ...
G. A. Andreev, M. Hartmanová
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2005
Proceeding of a Meeting held in Konstanz (February 2005) on Morphology and its ...
SCALISE, SERGIO, A. Lahiri
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Proceeding of a Meeting held in Konstanz (February 2005) on Morphology and its ...
SCALISE, SERGIO, A. Lahiri
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The Syntax-Morphology Interface
2005Syncretism - where a single form serves two or more morphosyntactic functions - is a persistent problem at the syntax-morphology interface. It results from a 'mismatch' whereby the syntax of a language makes a particular distinction but the morphology does not.
Baerman, M, Brown, DP, Corbett, GG
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2008
This monograph addresses morphology and its interfaces with phonology and syntax by examining comparative data from the Uto-Aztecan language family, and analyses involving reduplication as well as noun incorporation and related derivational morphology are provided within the framework of Distributed Morphology.
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This monograph addresses morphology and its interfaces with phonology and syntax by examining comparative data from the Uto-Aztecan language family, and analyses involving reduplication as well as noun incorporation and related derivational morphology are provided within the framework of Distributed Morphology.
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The Phonology/Morphology Interface
Abstract This chapter explores the phonology/morphology interface to reveal how phonological matters are critical to understanding aspects of morphological behaviour in bilinguals. The chapter begins with an exploration of why certain L2 morphemes are omitted in production via the Prosodic Transfer Hypothesis.openaire +1 more source

