In agglutinative Korean, verbal stems must be combined with one or more endings to generate word forms. In such a process, the final syllable of a verbal stem (e.g. "si-ki") may sometimes coalesce with the first syllable of an ending (e.g. "e-se") into one syllable (e.g.: "si-kye-se"). In order to generate these contracted forms linearly, a set of bridging vowels (e.g. "xe", "e") are introduced as of a special category. Through these bridges, stems are linearly combined with endings, thus producing both the long form (e.g.: "siki-xe-se") and the contracted form(e.g.: "siki-e-se" or "sikye-se"). The adequacy of such a treatment is then tested by constructing a Korean morphological system called KOMOR in Malaga, which accommodates Left-Associative Grammar, or tiny LAG, with feature structures.