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Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter Mouton May 2, 2013

Formulaicity in an agglutinating language: the case of Turkish

  • Philip Durrant

    Philip Durrant is Assistant Professor in the Graduate School of Education at Bilkent University in Ankara, Turkey

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Abstract

This study examines the extent to which complex inflectional patterns found in Turkish, a language with a rich agglutinating morphology, can be described as formulaic. It is found that many prototypically formulaic phenomena previously attested at the multi-word level in English – frequent co-occurrence of specific elements, fixed ‘bundles’ of elements, and associations between lexis and grammar – also play an important role at the morphological level in Turkish. It is argued that current psycholinguistic models of agglutinative morphology need to be complexified to incorporate such patterns. Conclusions are also drawn for the practice of Turkish as a Foreign Language teaching and for the methodology of Turkish corpus linguistics.


Graduate School of Education, Bilkent University, Ankara, Turkey

About the author

Philip Durrant

Philip Durrant is Assistant Professor in the Graduate School of Education at Bilkent University in Ankara, Turkey

Published Online: 2013-5-2

©[2013] by Walter de Gruyter Berlin Boston

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