Function composition
Function composition is an algebraic notion which DiSciullo & Williams (1987) adopt from Categorial Grammar to account for an important difference between compounding and affixation. In compounding the non-head satisfies a theta-role of the head. The non-head of a complex word headed by an affix, however, does not satisfy a theta-role of the affix; rather the affix and the stem form a composed argument structure. In order to be able to relate the argument structure of an affixal head to its non-head, they propose that suffixes are functors with respect to their complements.
Example
The English adjective complete has a Theme as its the external argument, and the nominal suffix -ness the "degree" argument R, as in (i). Since -ness is assumed to be a functor, function composition yields the composed argument structure in (ii):
(i) complete -ness => (ii) completeness (Th) (R) ((Th) R) functor
Link
Utrecht Lexicon of Linguistics
References
- Di Sciullo, A. M. and E. Williams 1987. On the Definition of Word, MIT-press, Cambridge, Mass.
- Spencer, A. 1991. Morphological Theory, Blackwell, Oxford.