The phonology of Romanian : a constraint-based approach /
This book provides the first systematic descriptive analysis of the phonological system of Romanian, one of the less studied Romance languages, from the perspective of recent phonological theory. The author offers an account of some of the major phonological processes of modern standard Romanian, se...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Berlin ; New York :
Mouton de Gruyter,
2002.
|
Colección: | Studies in generative grammar ;
56. |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Overview of Romanian phonology and morphology
- The phoneme inventory
- Phonotactics
- Syllable structure
- The representation of diphthongs
- The structure of the Romanian vocabulary
- Inflectional and derivational morphology
- Inflections
- Derivations
- The stress system
- Primary stress in verbs
- First and fourth conjugation verbs
- Third conjugation verbs
- Lexically marked exceptions
- Primary stress in nouns and adjectives
- Monomorphemic words: the unmarked pattern
- Monomorphemic nouns and adjectives: the marked pattern
- Morphologically complex words
- Secondary stress
- Hiatus resolution
- Vowel features and the representation of epenthetic glides
- The quality of the epenthetic glide
- Stress-dependent patterns
- Surface hiatus
- High vowel--glide alternations
- Word-initial glides
- Word-internal postvocalic glides
- Word-final postvocalic glides
- Underlying sequences of three vowels
- Central vowels and place harmony
- Post-consonantal glides and palatalization
- Post-consonantal glides and place co-occurrence restrictions
- Glides in morphologically derived forms
- Phonological and morphological palatalization
- Velar palatalization
- Morphological palatalization
- The diphthongs ea, oa and mid-low vowel alternations
- Data and previous analyses
- Vowel height and stress
- The phonological conditioning of mid-low vowel alternations
- The phonological behavior of ea and oa
- The phonological behavior of the low vowel a.