wren ng thornton wrote:
Indeed. The proliferation of compound words is noteworthy, but it's not generally considered an agglutinative language. From what (very little) German I know compounds tend to be restricted to nouns, as opposed to languages like Turkish, Japanese, Korean,...
Yes, compounds are restricted to nouns in German. But as I understand it, agglutinative relates more to the inflection system than to the lexicon anyway.
In German, inflection is usually done by adding a single suffix to the stem, and possibly altering the stem. The single suffix encodes various informations (e.g. number, gender and case for nouns) in a single morpheme.
In an agglutinative language, inflection is done by adding one morpheme per information.
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