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The M-component [...] serves the lexicon and syntax equally. But it is a component which merely marks the grammatical outputs of these two major grammatical components formally and does not represent any kind of structural grammar itself. The M-component is thus inessential, even optional component like phonology. Indeed, for this reason, it may not be considered an obligatory universal grammatical component; rather, it is a local generator of form dependent on local phonology more tha grammar. - Beard (2004), a pag.509 The morphological component is seen as an autonomous extralexical component feeding the phonological rules located just below surface level. Only when all L- and S-derivation is complete does the M-component interpret the features of the stem: lexical, derivational, inflectional, phonological and diacritic. - Beard (2004), a pag.512
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