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Syncretism

2021
This chapter shows how various forms and practices of modernist syncretism — the idea of East–West unity through cultural exchange and the melding of traditions — influenced Indian journals such as East and West, a modernist periodical published in Bombay, as well as famous British writers such as E. M. Forster and Rudyard Kipling.
Aaron W. Hughes, Russell T. McCutcheon
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Syncretism

2012
Abstract This chapter surveys current theoretical approaches to the phenomenon of syncretism, that is, cases where morphology fails to mark a morphosyntactically relevant featural distinction. We first review arguments and evidence that the distinction between coincidental and systematic patterns of syncretism is linguistically relevant (
Brown, Dunstan
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Syncretism

2013
Syncretism is a term that describes a relationship between morphology and syntax, where the distinctions required by syntax are not realized by morphology for a subset of words. For instance, in Russian there is a syntactically relevant distinction between nominative and accusative, reflected, for example, in the different forms of the lexeme “book ...
Dunstan Brown   +2 more
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Syncretism

Language and Linguistics Compass, 2006
Abstract Syncretism occurs where two or more distinct morphosyntactic values are collapsed in a single inflected word form. In the current literature, instances of syncretism are being increasingly cited to support particular models of morphology and feature structure.
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