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[...] the Full Listing Hypothesis (FLH) [...] implies the following kind of arrangement: a form (e.g. "sings") associated with a meaning (e.g. "sings'", which is intended to denote the meaning of "sings"), a major category V, and a list of suitable syntactic contexts, or subcategorization frames. - Butterworth (2004), a pag.5-6 Bradley [Bradley, D., 1978, Unpublished Ph. D. Dissertation, MIT, Massachusetts] has proposed a version of FLH in which (at least some regular) compounds are listed together under a representation which she calls the "name" of the word. Thus, "kick, kicking, kicker" will all be listed under "kick". - Butterworth (2004), a pag.17
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