The prosodic word in European Portuguese /
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Tesis Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Berlin ; New York :
Mouton de Gruyter,
2003.
|
Colección: | Interface explorations ;
6. |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Abbreviations and symbols
- Chapter 1. Theoretical background
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Prosodic Phonology: basic claims
- 3. The organization of grammar
- 3.1. The lexical/postlexical distinction and the properties of phonological processes
- 3.2. The locus of construction of prosodic domains
- 4. The status of the Clitic Group within the prosodic hierarchy
- 5. The Strict Layer Hypothesis
- 6. The prosodization of words
- 6.1. Diagnostics for the prosodic word
- 6.2. The prosodic word domain
- 6.3. The prosodization of clitics
- 6.4. The prosodization of compounds6.5. The prosodization of derived words
- 7. Syllabification, resyllabification, and prosodic restructuring
- 8. Concluding remarks and outline of the book
- Chapter 2. Previous studies on European Portuguese word phonology
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Pregenerative studies
- 3. SPE studies
- 4. Post-SPE studies
- 4.1. Words with two primary stresses
- 4.2. Cliticization
- 4.3. Phonological processes and the organization of grammar
- 5. Concluding remarks
- Chapter 3. Phonological phenomena: description and typology
- ""1. Introduction""""2. Word stress""; ""3. Vowel reduction""; ""4. Theme vowel deletion""; ""5. Final nasal diphthongization""; ""6. /e/-centralization""; ""7. Glide insertion to break a hiatus""; ""8. Lowering of stressless vowels in final syllables closed by /É?/""; ""9. Initial /É?/-strengthening""; ""10. The realization of word initial vowels""; ""11. Semivocalization""; ""11.1. V2 semivocalization (>VG)""; ""11.2. V1 semivocalization (>GV)""; ""12. Final non-back vowel deletion""; ""13. Final round vowel deletion""; ""14. Final central vowel deletion""; ""15. Syllable degemination""
- ""16. Initial stress""""17. Emphatic stress""; ""18. Tonal association""; ""19. Focal stress""; ""20. Summary""; ""Chapter 4. On the affix/clitic status of stressless pronouns""; ""1. Introduction""; ""2. Potential evidence for the lexical attachment of pronominal clitics""; ""2.1. Specialized host""; ""2.2. Phonological idiosyncrasy""; ""2.3. “Inflection� after cliticization""; ""3. Evidence for the postlexical insertion of pronominal clitics""; ""3.1. Distributional facts""; ""3.2. Phonological facts""; ""3.3. Other facts""; ""4. On the marks of lexicalization""
- 4.1. Selectivity with respect to the host4.2. Phonological idiosyncrasy
- 4.3. Mesoclisis
- 5. Conclusion
- Chapter 5. The Prosodic Word
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Phonological properties of prosodic words
- 3. Derived and inflected words corresponding to a single stress domain
- 3.1. Prosodization of suffixes
- 3.2. Prosodization of prefixes
- 4. Host plus clitic combinations
- 4.1. Phonological characterization of clitic words
- 4.2. Lexical prosodization of clitics
- 4.3. Postlexical prosodization of clitics
- 5. Affixes versus clitics