Theme: Diachronic Morphology. Guest editor: Martin Haspelmath. Umlaut as signans and signatum: synchronic and diachronic aspects; A. Carstairs-McCarthy. What sort of thing is a derivational affix? Diachronic evidence from Romanian and Spanish suffixes; M. Maiden. The development of `junk'. Irregularization strategies of HAVE and SAY in the Germanic languages; D. Nubling. Paradigm organization and lexical connections in the development of the Italian passato remoto; E. Magni. On useful darkness: loss and destruction of transparency by linguistic change, borrowing, and word creation; E. Ronneberger-Sibold. Other articles. The representation of prefixed forms in the Italian lexicon: Evidence from the distribution of intervocalic [s] and [z] in northern Italian; M. Baroni. On inherent inflection feeding derivation in Polish; B. Cetnarowska. The processing of interfixed German compounds; W.U. Dressler, et al. Word formation rules in a default inheritance framework: a Network Morphology account of Russian personal nouns; A. Hippisley. Stem selection and OT; S.G. Lapointe. Verb classifiers as noun incorporation in Israeli sign language; I. Meir.
Grammar, Comparative and general -- Morphology -- Periodicals.