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indirectafgeleid

Indirectafgeleid is a term used in Dutch linguistics to describe a word that is formed through one or more intermediate derivational steps rather than directly from a base form. In this sense, an indirectly derived word results from a chain of derivational processes, where the final form relies on an intermediate word that has itself already been derived.

The concept helps linguists distinguish between derivations that attach a single affix or modification to a

Mechanisms that can produce indirect derivation include multi-layer affixation (adding more than one affix in a

In practice, whether a derivation is labeled indirect depends on the analysis and the level of historical

lemma
and
those
that
unfold
over
several
stages.
Direct
derivation
typically
involves
one
clear
step
from
the
base
form,
while
indirect
derivation
involves
sequential
steps,
intermediate
forms,
or
reanalysis
that
preserve
a
link
to
an
earlier
stage
of
the
word’s
history.
sequence),
historical
reanalysis
(where
a
former
intermediate
word
changes
function
or
category
and
becomes
the
basis
for
further
derivation),
and
borrowings
that
undergo
subsequent
internal
derivation
within
a
language.
In
corpus
linguistics
and
etymology,
indirect
afleiding
may
be
noted
when
the
surface
form
appears
to
be
derived
not
from
the
immediate
base
lemma
but
from
a
prior,
already
derived
form.
detail
available.
Dictionaries
and
etymological
databases
may
mark
some
forms
as
indirect
afgeleid
to
reflect
their
multi-step
history.
See
also:
derivation,
morphology,
etymology,
affixation.