Prosodic PhonologyForis, 1986 - 327 pages |
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Page 48
... examined in American and RP varieties of English . What all of these rules demonstrate is that syntactic constituency cannot provide the appropriate domains for the application of a specific type of phonological rule , that is , any ...
... examined in American and RP varieties of English . What all of these rules demonstrate is that syntactic constituency cannot provide the appropriate domains for the application of a specific type of phonological rule , that is , any ...
Page 205
... examined the intonational phrase from the point of view of intonation contours , potential pause positions , and relative prominence patterns . While these phenomena would be adequate in themselves as motivation for the I constituent in ...
... examined the intonational phrase from the point of view of intonation contours , potential pause positions , and relative prominence patterns . While these phenomena would be adequate in themselves as motivation for the I constituent in ...
Page 234
... examined here actually offers several advantages over Harris's SPE - type formulations . First of all , we have separated the Voicing Assimilation rule into two separate prosodic rules . While this might be considered undesirable in the ...
... examined here actually offers several advantages over Harris's SPE - type formulations . First of all , we have separated the Voicing Assimilation rule into two separate prosodic rules . While this might be considered undesirable in the ...
Contents
Motivation for prosodic constituents | 27 |
The syllable and the foot | 61 |
34 | 74 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
adjacent affixes ambiguous sentences application of phonological basis branching trees Chapter clitic group complement compound consonant deletion disambiguation discussed domain of application elements English examples exemplified fact Flapping foot formulation given grammar Hayes hendecasyllable Hulst ical ictus ictuses illustrated intonation contours intonational phrase Italian Kiparsky language lexical linguistic mapping rules metrical metrical foot morpheme morpho-syntactic morphological n-ary branching Nasal Assimilation Nespor node notions noun obstruent phenomena phonetic phonological constituent phonological hierarchy phonological phrase phonological rules phonological utterance phonological word position possible predictions prefixes primary stress proposed prosodic constituents prosodic hierarchy prosodic phonology prosodic rules prosodic structure recursive languages reference relation relevant restructuring resyllabification rhyme rule applies rules that apply sandhi Schwa seen Selkirk semantic sequence shown span rule Spanish specific speech stem string suffixes syllabification syllable structure syntactic constituents syntactic hierarchy syntactic structure syntactic tree syntax terminal element theory tion Vogel vowel