i remember seeing something about this from the old board:
are there tendencies for different kinds of affixes (specifically verb affixes) to be closer to the root than other affixes?
Affixes
Re: Affixes
That happened to be an answer in response to a question I asked. Fortunately, I copied it since it was in Quickies.
Salmoneous wrote:some types of inflection tend to be closer to the root than others.
The order is: valency > voice > aspect > tense > mood > agreement (number > person (subject > object) > gender). However, only aspect > tense and aspect > mood are absolutely (or effectively) universal, and some variation is found with the other items.
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Re: Affixes
Chapter Two of Joan Bybee's Morphology: A Study of the Relation Between Meaning and Form has a lot on this, if you want some detail and can get your hands on it.
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Re: Affixes
Try Cinque (1999) "Adverbs and Functional Heads", esp. sections 3.1, 3.2. It's on Google Books; there's also a 1997 "working paper" version you can download online somewhere, or at least there used to be.
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