Phonological projection : a theory of feature content and prosodic structure /
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés Dutch Francés Norwegian |
Publicado: |
Berlin ; New York :
Mouton de Gruyter,
2000.
|
Colección: | Studies in generative grammar ;
47. |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- 1 Introduction
- 1 The Headedness of syllables
- 1.1 The Headedness Hypothesis (HH)
- 2 Theoretical background
- 2.1 Syllable structure
- 2.2 Feature geometry
- 2.3 Specification and underspecification
- 2.4 Skeletal tier
- 2.5 Model of the grammar
- 2.6 Optimality Theory
- 3 Data
- 4 Organisation of the book
- 4.1 Chapter 2
- 4.2 Chapter 3
- 4.3 Chapter 4
- 4.4 Chapter 5
- 4.5 Chapter 6
- 4.6 Chapter 7
- 4.7 Chapter 8
- 4.8 Appendices
- 2 Vowel quality and rhyme structure in Dutch
- 1 Introduction
- 2 The Dutch vowel system3 Tenseness versus length: The case of Dutch
- 3.1 The argument for length
- 3.2 The arguments against length
- 4 A theory based on the feature lax
- 5 [lax] and syllable structure in vowel harmony
- 5.1 Tenseness and branchingness in Dutch
- 5.2 Formalization in Optimality Theory
- 6 Some more arguments for the length of A-vowels
- 6.1 Tenseness cannot be defined in a satisfactory way phonetically
- 6.2 Minimality requires branching
- 6.3 A-vowels form the domain of tonal contour in Limburg Dutch
- 7 Richness of the base
- 8 Conclusion9 Appendix: Historical overview
- 9.1 Dutch structuralism
- 9.2 Pre-generative literature
- 9.3 Early generative grammar
- 9.4 Bisegmental analyses in generative phonology
- 3 Tilburg Dutch and Standard Dutch vowel length
- 1 Details in the Standard Dutch vowel system
- 1.1 Diphthongs
- 1.2 Ambisyllabicity
- 1.3 r-lengthening
- 1.4 The phonetic nature of the tensing feature
- 1.5 Extrasyllabicity and catalexis
- 2 A dialect with real length: Tilburg Dutch
- 2.1 The vowel system
- 2.2 Why only lax vowels can be long
- 2.3 Vowel shortening2.4 Analysis
- 2.5 Long vowels in other Brabant dialects
- 2.6 The limited distribution of long vowels
- 2.7 Conclusion
- 3 Derivation of the Dutch vowel system
- 4 Conclusion
- 4 Derived schwa in Dutch
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Properties of r-schwa
- 2.1 Word-initial position
- 2.2 Word-final position
- 2.3 Vowel quality
- 2.4 Stress
- 2.5 Closed syllables
- 2.6 Style registers
- 3 Properties of e-schwa
- 3.1 The epenthetic vowel is schwa
- 3.2 E-schwa does not occur at the end of the word
- 3.3 E-schwa only occurs in the last syllable of the word3.4 Word-internal contexts in which e-schwa does not occur
- 3.5 Style registers
- 4 Summary and conclusion
- 5 Dutch U-schwa
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Properties of u-schwa
- 2.1 Syllable weight
- 2.2 U-schwa does not occur word-initially
- 2.3 Some other segmental effects
- 2.4 The onset of schwa-syllables
- 2.5 The coda of schwa-headed syllables
- 2.6 Degenerate and schwa-headed syllables
- 2.7 Obligatory versus optional epenthesis
- 2.8 Again on complex onsets