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The Articulatory Basis of Locality in Phonology.

First Published in 1999. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.

Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Gafos, Adamantios I.
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Hoboken : Taylor and Francis, 2014.
Colección:Outstanding dissertations in linguistics.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Cover; Title Page; Copyright Page; Dedication; Table of Contents; Preface; Acknowledgments; Illustrations; Abbreviations; Chapter 1: Introduction; 1. Central Thesis; 2. Theoretical Background; 2.1 Gestures in Articulatory Phonology; 2.2 Specific Assumptions; 3. Organization of the Dissertation; Notes; Chapter 2: Articulatory Locality; 1. Introduction; 2. Articulation of a VCV Sequence; 3. Articulation of a CVC Sequence; 4. Converging Sources of Evidence for Articulatory Locality; 4.1 Vowel Harmony; 4.2 Consonant Harmony; 4.3 Spreading in Nonconcatenative Languages.
  • 5. Previous Proposals on Locality5.1 Tier-Adjacency in Various Feature Geometries; 5.2 Grounded Phonology and Dependency Phonology; 5.3 Locality as Root Adjacency; 6. Autosegmental Spreading and Articulatory Locality; 7. Summary and Conclusion; Notes; Chapter 3: On the Proper Characterization of 'Nonconcatenative' Languages; 1. Introduction; 2. Chapter Organization; 3. Correspondence in Optimality Theory; 4. Temiar Verbal Morphology: A Unified Account of Copying; 4.1 Basic Prosodic and Morphological Properties; 4.2 Segmental Copying Derived by Correspondence; 5. Temiar in Previous Analyses.
  • 6. On the Need to Eliminate LDC-spreading6.1 The Apparent Need for Reduplication and LDC-Spreading; 6.2 The Exceptional Status of LDC-Spreading; 7. Typological Consequences; 7.1 Further Analyses; 7.2 A-templatic Affixation; 8. Summary and Conclusion; 9. Excursus on Minor Syllables; Notes; Chapter 4: Articulatory Investigation of Coronal Consonants; 1. Introduction; 2. Articulatory Subdivisions of the Tongue and Palate; 3. Semi-Independence Between the Tip-Blade and the Dorsum; 4. Mid-Sagittal Postures of the Tip-Blade; 5. Proposal for a New Distinctive Feature; 5.1 English; 5.2 Chinese.
  • 5.3 Tohono O'odham5.4 Other Languages; 5.5 The Feature Tongue-Tip Constriction Area; 5.6 Speaker-to-Speaker Variation; 5.7 Language-to-Language Variation; 5.8 The Feature Distributed; 6. Summary and Conclusion; Notes; Chapter 5: Cross-linguistic Investigation of Consonant Harmony; 1. Introduction; 2. Chumash; 3. Tahltan; 4. Northern Athabaskan; 4.1 Chilcotin; 4.2 Tahltan; 4.3 Sekani; 4.4 Slave and its Dialects; 4.5 The Fricative-Approximant Alternation; 5. Southern Athabaskan; 5.1 Navajo; 5.2 Chiricahua Apache; 5.3 Kiowa Apache; 6. Kinyarwanda and Other Cases Involving Fricatives; 7. Sanskrit.
  • 8. Australian Languages9. Comparative Analysis; 10. Previous Analyses of Consonant Harmony; 11. Apparent Cases of Consonant Harmony; 11.1 Sound Symbolism; 11.2 Child Language; 11.3 Consonant Disharmony; 12. Summary and Conclusion; Notes; Chapter 6: Conclusion; Bibliography; Index.