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Substance and Function of Phonological Primes in the Government Phonology Tradition

Substance and Function of Phonological Primes in the Government Phonology Tradition

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Brutto

Karolina Drabikowska
ISBN:
978-83-8061-776-7
Stron: 294
Format: B5
Rok wydania: 2019


SPIS TREŚCI

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS

INTRODUCTION

1. PHONOLOGICAL PRIMES IN GOVERNMENT PHONOLOGY
1.1. Introduction
1.2. The genesis of GP and its basic concepts
1.3. The structure in GP
1.4. Substance
1.4.1. Privativeness, autonomy and universality
1.4.2. The element inventory
1.4.2.1. Elements for vowels
1.4.2.2. Elements for consonants
1.4.3. The subsegmental plane and contour structures
1.4.4. Segmental complexity and strength
1.4.5. GP and substance-free phonology
1.5. Function
1.5.1. Head-operator
1.5.2. Head-operator-dependent
1.5.3. Function as a potential remedy for overgeneration
1.5.3.1. The N/L merger
1.5.3.2. The H/h merger
1.6. Restrictions on function and substance - licensing constraints
1.7. Conclusions

2. PRIMES AND STRUCTURE IN GOVERNMENT PHONOLOGY 2.0 - A NEW PERSPECTIVE ON SUBSTANCE AND FUNCTION
2.1. Introduction
2.2. Where standard GP and GP 2.0 meet
2.3. Basic structures and licensing
2.3.1. Structure
2.3.1.1. Short vowels and glides
2.3.1.2. Long vowels, diphthongs and fricatives
2.3.1.3. Plosives
2.3.1.4. Some evidence in support of the GP 2.0 structure of obstruents
2.3.1.5. Adjunction
2.3.2. Licensing
2.3.2.1. M-command
2.3.2.2. Control
2.3.2.3. Heads
2.4. Substance in GP 2.0 - structure and melody
2.4.1. Structure
2.4.2. Phonological primes
2.4.2.1. The nature of melodic annotation
2.4.2.2. Binding and islands, or how to restrict annotation
2.4.3. Complexity and strength in GP 2.0
2.5. A higher-level structure - nuclear projections
2.5.1. The bee-type
2.5.2. The bid-type
2.5.3. The Libby-type
2.5.4. Clusters in the bid- and Libby-type
2.6. Segment versus constituent
2.7. Function of primes in GP 2.0
2.8. Conclusions

3. STRUCTURE AND MELODIC ANNOTATION - REPRESENTATIONS AND PROCESSES
3.1. Introduction
3.2. Notes on historical studies
3.2.1. Sound change
3.2.2. Old English sources
3.2.3. Old English vowels and consonants - introduction
3.3. Representations and processes
3.3.1. OE anterior fricatives and voicing phenomena
3.3.2. Palatalisation of velars in OE
3.3.2.1. Stops
3.3.2.2. Fricatives
3.3.3. OE consonants - the interim summary of the GP 2.0 representations
3.3.4. West Saxon short diphthongs
3.3.4.1. What the digraphs stand for
3.3.4.2. Breaking
3.3.4.3. Back mutation
3.3.5. The vowel-consonant interactions in closed syllables in Sursilvan
3.3.5.1. Rising diphthongs
3.3.5.2. The diphthong [au]
3.3.6. [a] and the velar nasal
3.4. Conclusions

CONCLUSIONS

BIBLIOGRAPHY

APPENDICES

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