Cargando…

Asymmetries in the phonology of Miogliola /

Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Ghini, Mirco, 1962-2001
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Berlin ; New York : Mouton de Gruyter, 2001.
Colección:Studies in generative grammar ; 60.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Preface
  • Maps
  • Introduction
  • Chapter 1. Theoretical assumptions
  • 1. The Prosodic Hierarchy
  • 1.1. Foot structure
  • 1.2. Syllable structure
  • 1.3. Segment structure
  • 2. Status of underspecification in phonology
  • 2.1. McCarthy and Taub (1992)
  • 2.2. Steriade (1995)
  • 2.3. Underspecification and psycholinguistics
  • 3. Summary of the chapter
  • Chapter 2. An overview of the Miogliola consonants
  • 1. Surface consonants
  • 2. Underlying consonants
  • 3. The glides
  • 4. The ghost consonants
  • 5. The nasal [g]
  • 5.1. [Å?] as the fourth nasal phoneme5.2. [Å?] as the fifth placeless consonant
  • 5.3. The Default Variability Hypothesis (DVH): underlyingly placeless /N/, surface placeless [Å?]
  • 5.4. The other placeless segments and the DVH
  • 5.5. Representing non-alternating [n] as placeless, alternating [n/Å?] as dorsal
  • 5.6. [Dorsal] as the default feature?
  • 5.7. A full specification approach to Miogliola nasals
  • 6. Miogliola consonant inventory
  • 6.1. Rhotics as the unspecified sonorants: Pignasco
  • 7. Summary of the chapter
  • Chapter 3. Consonantal prosody and metrical structure1. Lengthening and non-lengthening consonants
  • 2. On building metrical structure around stress
  • 2.1. Obligatorily heavy stressed penults (1): vowel lengthening
  • 2.2. Obligatorily heavy stressed penults (2): ambisyllabicity
  • 2.3. The well-formedness of light stressed antepenults
  • 2.4. The building of a moraic trochee
  • 2.5. Stressed penults as heads of a moraic trochee
  • 2.6. Final stress and the rhyme as a constituent
  • 2.7. Stressed antepenults as heads of a moraic trochee
  • 3. On deriving stress
  • 3.1. Stress assignment3.2. Lexical stress
  • 3.3. Mora keeping versus mora losing consonants
  • 3.4. Overview of the metrical system
  • 4. The status of penultimate stress
  • 4.1. Romance Stress
  • 4.2. Italian
  • 4.3. Spanish
  • 4.4. The evolution of penultimate stress from Latin
  • 5. Summary of the chapter
  • Chapter 4. Vowel patterns before /N/
  • 1. The vowel inventory before /N/
  • 2. The lengthening before intervocalic /N/
  • 3. Ambisyllabicity, not VC. V-syllabification
  • 4. Vowel patterns before /N/ in stressed antepenults
  • 5. Unstressed vowels before /N/6. Genovese /N/
  • 7. Summary of the chapter
  • Chapter 5. An overview of the vowel system in Miogliola
  • 1. Vowel inventories
  • 1.1. Vowels in stressed position
  • 1.2. Reduced vowel inventories
  • 2. Vowel feature specification
  • 2.1. The short vowels
  • 2.2. The long vowels
  • 2.3. Accounting for the reduced inventories
  • 3. Summary of the chapter
  • Chapter 6. The dorsal vowel /α /
  • 1. Allophonic distribution of the vowel /α /
  • 2. The vowel /α / before the lengthening consonants