Karasimos Athanasios - Academia.edu (original) (raw)
Experienced Tutor with a demonstrated history of working in the higher education schools (Hellenic Open University, AUTH). Skilled in Computational Linguistics, Morphology, Educational Technology and Databases. Strong education professional with a PhD focused in Computational Morphology from University of Patras. Member of Digital Humanities Research Programs/ Consortium (DARIAH-GR/ΔΥΑΣ, PARTHENOS-EU).
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Papers by Karasimos Athanasios
Gengo Kenkyu, 2010
In this paper, we address the issue of constraints in word formation. We claim that the absence o... more In this paper, we address the issue of constraints in word formation. We claim that the absence of derivational suffixes within Modern Greek compounds is due to the operation of the so-called Bare-stem constraint, which applies to output configurations. Our analysis builds on different types of compounds from Standard Modern Greek and its dialects. However, we focus mostly on dvandva [V V] compounds, which are unique in Modern Greek from all Indo-European languages. We also discuss a limited number of counter-examples, and show that they are only apparent exceptions to the operation of the constraint. We argue that most of them result from a reanalysis procedure, or refer to lexicalizations and loan words, which do not usually obey the rules of the language.
Gengo Kenkyu, 2010
In this paper, we address the issue of constraints in word formation. We claim that the absence o... more In this paper, we address the issue of constraints in word formation. We claim that the absence of derivational suffixes within Modern Greek compounds is due to the operation of the so-called Bare-stem constraint, which applies to output configurations. Our analysis builds on different types of compounds from Standard Modern Greek and its dialects. However, we focus mostly on dvandva [V V] compounds, which are unique in Modern Greek from all Indo-European languages. We also discuss a limited number of counter-examples, and show that they are only apparent exceptions to the operation of the constraint. We argue that most of them result from a reanalysis procedure, or refer to lexicalizations and loan words, which do not usually obey the rules of the language.