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[...] it is also possible that there exists a [...] kind of morphology, which can be called "template morphology" [...]. This is associated with the following cluster of properties (adapted from [Speas, M., 1984, "Navajo Prefixes and Word Structure Typology", MIT Cambridge]) a. The position of a given affix is generally rigidly fixed, with no more than a very limited recursion of affixes. b. "Derivational" and "inflectional" morphemes are interspersed, rather than showing the normal pattern of having inflectional morphology "outside" of derivational morphology. c. There are discontinuous dependencies between morphemes, in apparent violation of principles of morphological subjacency or bracket erasure. In view of these properties, such languages have been thought of as having verbs associated with a specified number of affix slots, all affixes being dropped into their particular slots in effect simultaneously (hence the name "template" morphology). - Baker (2004), a pag.30-31
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