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Definition of Morphological rule
1. Noun. A linguistic rule for the formation of words.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Morphological Rule
Literary usage of Morphological rule
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. First Text Retrieval Conference (Trec-1): Proceedings by D. K. Harman (1993)
"A lexicon of approximately 97000 'root-form' items (English words) is the principal
resource used by Morph in addition to its morphological rule set. ..."
2. Applied and Economic Botany for Students in Technical and Agricultural by Wilfred William Robbins (1896)
"... we must alg(> include the morphological rule that normal lateral buds appear
axillary, that is, in the axis of a leaf. ..."
3. Cyclopedia of American Horticulture: Comprising Suggestions for Cultivation by Liberty Hyde Bailey, Wilhelm Miller (1902)
"In this the melon but follows a fixed morphological rule, prominently emphasized
by many familiar products of the garden ami orchard. ..."
4. Native Writings in Massachusett by Ives Goddard, Kathleen Joan Bragdon (1988)
"After |-ukw| the w-endings lose the characterizing element |w| by morphological
rule. TA stems contract a stem-final |-aw| with the initial vowel of theme ..."
5. Introduction to Elementary Practical Biology: A Laboratory Guide for High by Charles Wright Dodge (1894)
"If the morphological rule that each pair of appendages corresponds to a segment
be correct, how many segments are there in the body of the animal ? ..."
6. Afrika und Übersee by Carl Meinhof (1845)
"In other words, by a type of morphological rule inversion, modern Hausa now has
a productive rule for deriving adverbials from nominals by shortening of the ..."