PRZEDMIOTEM OFERTY JEST KOD DOSTĘPOWY DO KSIĄŻKI ELEKTRONICZNEJ (EBOOK)
KSIĄŻKA JEST DOSTĘPNA NA ZEWNĘTRZNEJ PLATFORMIE. KSIĄŻKA NIE JEST W POSTACI PLIKU.
This set of 23 volumes, originally published between 1952 and 1996, amalgamates a wide breadth of researchon the subject of phonetics and phonology, including studies on the axiomatic method, nonlinear phonology, and prosodic phonology. This collection of books from some of the leading scholars in the field provides a comprehensive overview of the subject how it has evolved over time, and will be of particular interest to students of language and linguistics.
- Autorzy: Various
- Wydawnictwo: Taylor & Francis
- Data wydania: 2021
- Wydanie: 1
- Liczba stron:
- Forma publikacji: PDF (online)
- Język publikacji: angielski
- ISBN: 9780429792908
BRAK MOŻLIWOŚCI POBRANIA PLIKU. Drukowanie: OGRANICZENIE DO 2 stron. Kopiowanie: OGRANICZENIE DO 2 stron.
- Volume 01
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- Preface
- Part I: Logical Preliminaries
- Chapter 1: Axiomatic Method and Phonology
- Chapter 2: Logical Apparatus
- Chapter 3: Elements of Mereology
- Part II: Axiomatic System of Phonology
- Chapter 1: Primitive Notions
- Chapter 2: Axioms
- Chapter 3: Immediate Consequences of Axioms
- Chapter 4: Phonetic Chains
- Chapter 5: Predecessor, Successor and Segmenting Function
- Chapter 6: Utterances and Phrases
- Chapter 7: Phonetic Equivalence and the Notion of Word
- Chapter 8: Phones and Phonic Systems
- Chapter 9: Unit-Length Segments
- Chapter 10: Compound Features
- Chapter 11: Sounds and Phonetic Systems
- Chapter 12: Distribution of Sounds
- Chapter 13: Phonemes and the Fundamental Hypotheses of Phonology
- Chapter 14: Final Remarks
- References
- Index
- Volume 02
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Preface
- Table of Contents
- Abbreviations
- Phonetic Alphabet
- Chapter I: Sounds, Symbols and Alphabets
- Means of Conveying Meaning
- Sounds and Symbols
- Phonetics
- The History of Phonetics
- Experimental Phonetics
- Alphabets and Spelling
- The Standard Language
- Nomic and Phonetic Alphabets
- Phonemes
- Chapter II: The Production and Classification of Sounds
- Production of articulated Sounds
- Articulation
- The Delta
- Bases of Articulation
- Classiffication of Sounds
- Classiffication of Sounds according to Place of Interception
- Classification according to Mode of Interception
- Fixed Sounds and Sounds of Motion
- Acoustic Classification
- Vowels
- The Formation and Classification of Vowels
- Fixed Sounds and Glides
- The Cardinal Vowels
- Firm and Loose Attachment
- Consonants: Definitions and Terms
- The three Sub-divisions of Consonants
- Rounding of Consonants
- Voiced and Voiceless Consonants
- Lenes and Fortes
- Articulation of Glottal Stop, Aspirates and Affricates
- Aspiration
- Homorganic Sounds
- Uniform and Non-uniform Sounds
- Lateral Consonants
- Nasal Consonants
- Palatalized Consonants
- l mouillé
- Rolled and Flapped Consonants
- Sonantal or Sonorous Consonants
- Devoiced Sounds
- Semi-Consonants
- Fricatives
- Labial Fricatives
- Dental Fricatives
- Laryngeal Fricatives
- Palatal and Velar Fricatives
- r and l as Fricatives
- Plosive Consonants
- Labial Plosives
- Dental Plosives
- Velar Plosives
- Doubleand Long Consonants
- Chapter III: Historical Phonetics
- Phonetics as a Branch of Philology
- Lautwandel
- The Chronology of Sounds and their Nature at a given Period
- Gradual and instantaneous Mutation
- Adaptation of Sound to Spelling
- Sound Laws
- Lautersatz
- Levelling Out
- Alternation of Sounds
- Verner's Law
- Rückumlaut
- Vowel Gradation (Ablaut)
- Compensatory Lengthening
- Lengthening of M.H.G. Short Vowels
- Shortening of Long Vowels
- Weakening of Vowels in unaccented Syllables
- Vanishing Grade
- Behaghel's Law
- Apocope of Vowel in first Syllable
- Surnames formed by Apokope
- Letter Words
- Ingvaeonic or North Western Sound Changes
- Mutation of Consonants
- The Primitive Germanic Dental Rule
- Metathesis
- Schüttelformen
- Fall of Initial Consonants
- Alternations of Consonants in Final Position
- Alternation of Velar with Palatal Consonants
- Syncope of an Intervocalic or other Consonant
- Contaminations
- Epenthesis
- Epithesis
- Parasite Vowels
- Intercalation of Semi-Vowels
- Streckformen
- Borrowings from Foreign Languages
- Hybrids
- Onomatopoeia and Reduplication
- Assimilation
- Varieties of Assimilation
- Contact Assimilation
- Bilateral Assimilation
- Assimilation of Plosive to Vowel
- Elision
- Reduction of Consonant Agglomeration
- Haplology
- Non-contact Assimilation
- Anticipation (Vorwegnahme)
- Assimilation due to Articulatory Processes
- Apostrophizing
- Stimmlose Bindung
- Devoicing by Assimilation
- Sandhi
- Sequences of identical Consonants
- Assimilation of the Point of Articulation
- Nasalization of Vowels by Assimilation
- Assimilation of the Mode of Assimilation
- Incomplete Plosion
- Lateral Plosion
- Nasal and Lateral Plosion
- Labialization, Palatalization and Velarization
- Assibilation
- Umlaut
- Sch-mutation
- Non-contact Assimilation of Consonants
- Fernungleichung
- Alliteration and Assonance
- Velarization
- A-Umlaut, Brechung
- Dissimilation
- Diphthongization
- Monophthongization
- Dissimilation in Inflexional Forms
- Native Substitutes for Foreign Sounds
- Euphemisms
- Obscured Etymologies
- Popular Etymology
- Double Development of Sounds
- Chapter IV: Syllabication, Accent, Pitch and Rhythm
- Analysis and Classification of Sounds
- Sonority or Audibility
- Intensity or Loudness
- Tamber
- Pitchand Intonation
- Compass and Registers of Voice
- Duration or Length
- Tempo
- Accent
- Standard and Local Accent
- Stress
- Word Accent and Sentence Accent
- Grades of Stress
- Secondary Stress
- The Distribution of Stress
- Accent Shifting
- Gradations and Variations of Accent
- Gradations of Secondary Stress
- Varieties of Accent
- Psychological Elements of Accent. Emphatic Stress
- Value Accent
- Unit Accent
- Contrast Emphasis
- Novelty Emphasis
- Emotional Emphasis Emphasis Accent
- Irony
- Grammatical Accent
- Rhythm
- Verse Rhythm
- Rhythmical Accent and Natural Accent
- Rhythmical Prose
- Accidental or Incongruous Rhythmical Accentuation
- Rhythmical Accent
- The Accentuation of Compounds
- Double Compounds
- Word Group Accent in Compounds
- Classification of Compounds
- Juxtapositions
- Obscured Etymologies in Compounds
- Copulative Compounds
- Appositive Compounds
- Determinative Compounds
- Agglutinative Compounds
- Verbal Compounds with Separable First Members
- Derivations from Compounds (Dekomposita)
- Juxtapositions with indeclinable Word for Second Member
- Prefix + Noun, Adjective or other Word
- Verbal Compounds
- Place Names
- Names of Streets and Squares
- Foreign Place Names
- Appositional Place Names
- Copulative Place Names
- Contrasting Adjectives, and Kur+Name
- Christian Names and Surnames
- Names of Foreign Origin
- Ancient Germanic Names
- Names beginning with Ros, Rosa Rose, Rosen
- Latinized German Names
- Surnames from Phrases
- Place-Names from Phrases
- Titles
- Names of Festivals
- Oaths
- Salutations
- Reduplication, Rhyming, Alliteration and Onomatopoeia
- Interjections
- Ablaut Juxtapositions
- Certain First Members
- German Endings and Suffixes
- Foreign Endings
- Unstressed Foreign Endings
- Nouns in -or
- Weights and Measures
- Accentual Fluctuation in other Words
- German Words with Stress shifted rhythmically or by Analogy
- Hybrids
- Foreign Words, and often L.G. words, with Ka-, Kal-, Kan-, Kar-
- Subsidiary Stress
- Christian Names
- Foreign Words
- Connected Speech
- Prominence
- Slurring
- Syllables
- Schallsilben
- Drucksilben und Schallsilben
- Lengthened Syllables
- Open and Closed Syllables
- Sprachsilben und Sprechsilben
- Syllables in Hiatus Position
- Orthographical Division of Syllables (Silbentrennung)
- Sprechtakte
- Punctuation
- Intonation
- Direct Quotations
- Sense by Intonation
- Coordinated Main Clauses
- Dependent Clauses
- Punctuation Marks
- Climax
- Vocatives
- Questions
- Exclamations
- Wishes (Wunschsatze)
- Schallanalyse
- Chapter V: Orthography and Orthoepy
- Orthography
- Ligatures
- Homonyms
- Orthoepy
- Length of Vowels
- Shortening of Long Vowels
- Short Vowels
- Shortened Vowels in Compounds and Derivatives
- Rhymes
- The Glottal Stop
- Hiatus
- Liaison
- Vowels
- Germanization of Nasalized Vowels
- Consonants
- Lenes
- Aspiration
- Hardening of Final Consonants
- Assimilation Dangers
- Devoicing after Voiceless Consonants
- Schwundstufe and Jamming of Consonants
- Consonant Groups
- Long Consonants
- Bibliography
- Subject Index
- Index of Words and Names
- Volume 03
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Acknowledgements
- Table of Contents
- Preface
- Chapter 1: Introduction
- 1.1: The Nature of Assimilation
- 1.2: Theoretical Background
- 1.3: Non-Linear Models
- 1.4: Underspecification
- 1.5: Harmony in Multi-Dimensional Phonology
- Chapter 2: Blocking in Parasitic Harmony
- 2.1: Parasitic Harmony
- 2.2: Menomini Height Harmony
- 2.3: Maasai [ATR] Harmony
- 2.3.1: General Harmony
- 2.3.2: Diphthong-induced Harmony
- 2.4: Conclusion
- Chapter 3: Consonant Symbolism
- 3.1: Consonant Symbolism as Assimilation
- 3.2: The Morphological Analysis
- 3.2.1: Floating features as assimilation triggers
- 3.2.2: The complexity argument
- 3.2.3: Restricting the power of phonological rules
- Chapter 4: Morphologically Governed Harmony
- 4.1: The Morpheme Plane Hypothesis
- 4.1.1: Semitic morphology
- 4.1.2: Morpheme planes and anti-gemination
- 4.2: Harmony in Coeur d'Alene
- 4.2.1: Glottal Harmony
- 4.2.2: Faucal Harmony
- 4.3: Wiyot Anterior/Continuant Harmony
- 4.4: Warlpiri Labial Harmony
- 4.4.1: Progressive Harmony
- 4.4.2: Regressive Harmony
- 4.5: Mixtec Nasal Harmony
- 4.6: Locality Conditions on Phonological Rules
- Chapter 5: Plane Conflation
- 5.1: Evidence for Plane Conflation
- 5.1.1: Plane Conflation and Harmony
- 5.1.2: Plane Conflation in McCarthy's Analysis
- 5.2: Lexical Phonology and the Bracket Erasure Convention
- 5.3: Counterexamples to the BEC
- 5.3.1: English Derivational Suffixation
- 5.3.2: Seri
- 5.3.3: Ci-Ruri
- 5.3.4: Sekani
- 5.3.5: Discussion
- 5.4: Adjacency in Phonology and Morphology
- 5.4.1: Adjacency in Morpho-phonological Parsing
- 5.4.2: The Adjacency Constraint
- 5.4.3: The Adjacency Constraint and Plane Conflation in Ci-Ruri
- 5.5: Floating Features and Morpheme Planes in Tonal Phonology
- 5.6: Summary
- Chapter 6: Case Studies in Planar Phonology
- 6.1: M-Adjacency in Fula and Malayalam
- 6.2: Fula Consonant Mutation
- 6.3: Malayalam Nominal Derivation
- 6.4: Dakota
- 6.5: Hausa
- Bibliography
- Volume 04
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Acknowledgements
- Abstract
- Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Footnotes
- Chapter I: Short Diphthongs and Phonological Abstractiness
- 1.1: Introduction
- 1.2: Back Mutation
- 1.2.1: A restriction on Back Mutation
- 1.2.2: ae-Raising
- 1.2.3: Smoothing
- 1.3: Extending the Application of Back Mutation
- 1.3.1: The Weak Class II verbs
- 1.3.2: Back Mutation in non-derived forms
- 1.3.3: Epenthesis
- 1.4: Breaking
- 1. 4.1: Retraction
- 1.4.2: Degemination
- 1.5: Some Remaining Short Diphthongs
- 1.6: 'Abstract' and 'Concrete' Theories
- 1.7: Evidence from Change
- Footnotes
- Chapter II: Unseen i and Verb Morphology
- 2.1: Introduction
- 2.2: The Strong Class 5 Verbs
- 2.2.1: Strong Class 5 verbs with weak presents
- 2.2.2: Sources of surface e
- 2.2.3: Strong Class 5 verbs - remaining forms
- 2.3: The Weak Class I Verbs
- 2.3.1: The Weak Class I verbs - short stems
- 2.3.2: Evidence for underlying ae
- 2.3.3: Short stem Weak Class I verbs - more rules
- 2.3.4: The Weak Class I verbs - short stems ending in -r
- 2.3.5: The Weak Class I verbs - long stems
- Footnotes
- Chapter III: Noun Morphology and Vowel Deletion
- 3.1: Preliminary Observations
- 3.2: Word-Internal Vowel Deletion
- 3.3: Word-Final u
- 3.4: On the Deletion of Word-Final u
- 3.4.1: The Neuter a-nouns
- 3.4.2: The Feminine o-nouns
- 3.4.3: The u-nouns
- 3.4.4: The z-nouns
- 3.4.5: The a-/o- adjectives
- 3.5: Extended Vowel Deletion
- 3.6: The Development of EVD in VP
- 3.7: Apparent Exceptions to Vowel Deletion
- 3.7.1: The ga-nouns
- 3.7.2: The Feminine abstract nouns
- 3.7.3: The ga-/go-adjectives
- 3.8: Accounting for Apparent Exceptions
- 3.8.1: Breaking and Retraction - apparent exceptions
- 3.8.2: Unseen i in noun morphology
- 3.9: Summary of the Analysis
- 3.10: Rules and Exceptions: The Strong Verbs
- Footnotes
- Chapter IV: Second Fronting
- 4.1: Introduction
- 4.2: The Distribution of stressed a
- 4.2.1: Stressed a in the Retraction environment
- 4.2.2: Stressed a in other environments
- 4.3: Retraction: Opacity and Exceptions
- 4.4: The Chronology of Second Fronting
- 4.5: An Unexplained Failure of Second Fronting
- 4.5.1: a-Restoration and Retraction
- 4.5.2: Second Fronting as Rule Loss
- 4.6: Second Fronting: An Unexplained Lacuna
- 4.6.1: The Evolution of the Ep dialect
- 4.6.2: The Evolution of the Cp dialect
- 4.7: Summary of the Rule Loss Solution
- 4.8: Consequences of the Rule Loss Analysis
- Footnotes
- Chapter V: Conclusion
- Footnotes
- Bibliography
- Volume 05
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- Dedication
- Editorial Statement
- Introduction
- Notational Conventions
- Contributors
- Chapter 1: Dependency Phonology
- Chapter 2: Suprasegmental Dependencies
- Chapter 3: Sequence, Segment and Configuration: Two Problems for Dependency Phonology
- Chapter 4: French Liaison, Floating Segments and Other Matters in a Dependency Framework
- Chapter 5: Segmental and Suprasegmental Structure
- Chapter 6: Relating to Metrical Structure
- Chapter 7: A Dependency Approach to some Well-known Features of Historical English Phonology
- Chapter 8: The English Velar Fricative, Dialect Variation and Dependency Phonology
- Chapter 9: On Tridirectional Feature Systems for Vowels
- Chapter 10: Constituency and Syllable Structure
- Bibliography
- Name Index
- Subject lndex
- Volume 06
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Preface to the Garland edition
- Table of Contents
- List of maps
- List of abbreviations
- Acknowledgments
- Chapter 1: Sekani
- 1: Introduction
- 2: The position of Sekani within Athabaskan
- 3: Previous studies of Sekani
- 4: The present study
- 5: Surface and underlying segments
- 5.1: Orthographic conventions
- 5.2: Labio-velars
- 5.3: Nasal vowels
- 6: Distinctive features
- Notes
- Chapter 2: Lexical Phonology
- 1: The organization of grammar in the Lexical Phonology model
- 2: Comparison with the SPE model of grammar
- 3: How abstract is morphology?
- 3.1: The Chomsky/Jackendoff approach to morphology and the lexicon
- 3.2: Level ordering
- 3.2.1: A level ordered model of the English lexicon
- 3.2.2: The negative prefixes in English
- 3.2.3: Zero-derived verbs
- 3.2.4: Summary
- 3.2.5: The abstractness of level ordering
- 3.3: Advantages of abstract morphology
- 3.3.1: Inadequacy of word-based morphology
- 3.3.2: Consequences of lexically listing unproductive affixes in English
- 3.4: Problems with abstract morphology
- 3.4.1: Overgeneration
- 3.4.2: Idiosyncracy of outputs
- 3.5: Summary
- 4: Orderings of phonological and morphological processes
- 4.1: Tagalog Nasal Substitution and Syncope in reduplicative forms
- 4.2: Danish Lengthening and imperative formation
- 4.3: Summary
- 5: The lexical/postlexical rule typology
- 5.1: An example from English
- 5.2: The derived-only restriction
- 5.2.1: A closer look at 'derived'
- 5.2.2: Deriving the derived-only restriction
- Notes
- Notes
- Chapter 3: Level Ordering; The Verbal Prefixes
- 1: A level-ordered overview of the verbal prefixes
- 2: Level 1
- 2.1: Morphology
- 2.1.1: Aspectual stem suffixation
- 2.1.2: Classifier prefixes (position 13)
- 2.1.2.1: h
- 2.1.2.2: d
- 2.1.2.3: d+h (*1)
- 2.1.2.4: Phonological effects of the classifiers
- 2.2: Level 1 phonology
- 2.2.1: Voicing Assimilation
- 2.2.1.1: Domain of Voicing Assimilation
- 2.2.1.2: The classifier prefi1es
- 2.2.1.3: Summary
- 2.2.2: The D-Effect Rule
- 2.2.2.1: Domain of the D-Effect Rule
- 2.2.2.2: Order and formulation of the D-Effect Rule
- 2.2.3: Palatalization
- 2.3: Level 1: Summary
- 3. Level 2
- 3.1: Morphology
- 3.1.1: Subject prefixes (position 12)
- 3.1.2: Made prefixes (position 11)
- 3.1.3: Conjugation prefixes (position 10)
- 3.1.4: Position 9
- 3.1.4.1: Order of prefixes within position 9
- 3.1.4.2: Order with respect to position 8 and 12 prefixes
- 3.1.4.3: Affix order: Summary
- 3.2: Level 2 (vs. 3) phonology
- 3.2.1: The s-conjugation rules
- 3.2.1.1: Formulation of the s-Conjugation rules
- 3.2.1.2: Domain of the s-Conjugation rules
- 3.2.2: n-conjugation a Fronting
- 4: Levels 3 and 4
- 4.1: Morphology
- 4.1.1: Subject prefixes (position 8)
- 4.1.2: Object prefixes (position 7)
- 4.2: Levels 2 and 3 phonology
- 4.2.1: Prefix Vowel Deletion
- 4.2.1.1: Formulation of Prefix Vowel Deletion
- 4.2.1.2: Domain of Prefix Vowel Deletion
- 4.2.2: Conjugation Tone Happing
- 4.2.2.1: Formulation of Conjugation Tone Mapping
- 4.2.2.2: Domain of Conjugation Tone Mapping
- 4.2.3: L Deletion
- 4.2.3.1: Formulation of L Deletion
- 4.2.3.2: Domain of L Deletion
- 4.2.4: Vocalization
- 4.2.4.1: Formulation of Vocalization
- 4.2.4.2: Domain of Vocalization
- 4.2.5: Conjugation a Deletion
- 4.2.5.1: Formulation of Conjugation a Deletion
- 4.2.5.2: Domain of Conjugation a Deletion
- 4.2.5.2.1: /gha/
- 4.2.5.2.2: /'sa and /' na/
- 4.2.5.2.3: Domain of Conjugation a Deletion: Summary
- 4.2.6: na Absorption
- 4.2.7: Levels 2, 3 and 4: Summary
- 4.3: Level 3 vs. 4 phonology
- 4.3.1: Similarities of ?a, ts'a and gha to other position 7-9 prefixes
- 4.3.2: ?a, ts'a, gha and the domain of Conjugation Tone Mapping
- 5: Level 5
- 5.1: Morphology
- 5.1.1: Inceptive prefix (position 6)
- 5.1.2: The na prefixes (position 5)
- 5.1.2.1: Reversative na
- 5.1.2.2: Customary, habitual na
- 5.1.2.3: Positional properties of the na prefixes (1)
- 5.1.3: Distributive prefixes (position 4)
- 5.1.4: Incorporated stems (position 3)
- 5.1.5: Adverbial prefixes (position 2)
- 5.1.6: Incorporated postpositions (position 1)
- 5.2: Level 5 phonology: a Raising
- 5.2.1: Formulation of a Raising
- 5.2.2: Domain of a Raising
- 5.2.3: Positional-properties of the na prefixes (II)
- 6: Postlexical phonology
- 6.1: Devocalization
- 6.2: Glottal Stop Insertion
- 6.2.1: Underlying tone or glottal stop?
- 6.2.2: Characteristics of Glottal Stop Insertion
- 7: Summary
- Notes
- Chapter 4: Level Ordering: Nominals and Postpositions
- 1: Stems
- 2. Level 1 suffixes
- 2.1: Possessive suffixes
- 2.2: -e
- 2.3: -hu human plural
- 2.4: Instrumental stems
- 2.5: Level Nasalization
- 2.6: Summary
- 3: Level 5 suffixes
- 3.1: Nominalizing suffixes
- 3.1.1: Examples
- 3.1.2: Level Ordering: Nasalization
- 3.1.3: Possessed derived nominals
- 3.1.4: Locative Nominals
- 3.2: Diminutives and other adjectives
- 3.2.1: Diminutives
- 3.2.2: -za? prototypical
- 3.3: Human plural -ge/ghe
- 3.4: Level 5 suffixes: Summary
- 4: Compounds and prefixes
- 4.1: Possessive prefixes and oblique objects
- 4.2: Compounds
- 4.3: Continuant Voicing
- 4.3.1: Basic data
- 4.3.2: Incorporated stems
- 4.3.3: Continuant Voicing vs. Voicing Assimilation
- 4.3.4: Possessed continuant-initial compounds
- 4.4: Level ordering
- 4.4.1: Nasalization
- 4.4.2: Domain of Continuant Voicing
- 4.4.3: The loop
- 4.5: Summary
- 5: Conclusion
- Notes
- Chapter 5: The Bracketing Erasure Convention
- 1: Motivation for Bracketing Erasure
- 2: Motivation for non-cyclic, level-final Bracketing Erasure
- 3: Violations of the Bracket Erasure Convention in Sekani
- 3.1: Conjugation a Deletion
- 3.1.1: Evidence for Bracketing Erasure
- 3.1.2: The problem for Bracketing Erasure
- 3.1.3: Possible reanalyses of Conjugation a Deletion
- 3.1.3.1: Merging levels 2-4
- 3.1.3.2: A morphological formulation
- 3.1.3.3: A syllable-based rule
- 3.1.4 Conjugation a Deletion: summary
- 3.2: Perambulatives
- 3.3: Continuant Voicing in derived nominals
- 3.4: Suffix Vowel Deletion
- 3.4.1: Basic Data
- 3.4.2: Stem vs. suffix vowels
- 3.4.3: Problems for Exceptionless Bracketing Erasure
- 3.4.3.1: Possessed derived nominals
- 3.4.3.2: Stem-final vs. suffixal -[e] and -[e?]
- 4: Conclusion
- Notes
- Chapter 6: Epenthesis
- 1: Introduction
- 2: The domain of Epenthesis--a first approximation
- 3: Formulation of Epenthesis
- 3.1: The importance of stem bracketing
- 3.2: A syllable-based rule of Epenthesis?
- 4:. Rule Ordering
- 4.1: Conjugation rules
- 4.2: Position 12 subject prefixes
- 4.3: Summary
- 5: Level 5 Epenthesis
- 6: Epenthesis and Stray n Deletion
- 6.1: Stray n Deletion
- 6.2: Rule ordering
- 7: Conclusion
- Notes
- Chapter 7: The Cycle
- 1: Do cyclic rules exist?
- 2: which rules are cyclic?
- 3: Cyclic rule applicatlon in Sekani
- 3.1: Diphthongization and w Vocalization
- 3.1.1: Diphthongization
- 3.1.2: w Vocalization
- 3.1.3: Rule ordering: the gho-gho forms
- 3.1.4: Diphthongization and w Vocalization are cyclic
- 3.2: Possessive suffixation and Nasalization
- 3.2.1: Nasalization
- 3.2.2: Repossessed nouns
- 3.2.3: An ordering paradox
- 3.2.4: Nasalization is cydic
- 4: Non-cyclic rule application in Sekani
- 4.1: Schwa Lowering
- 4.1.1: w Vocalization and second person plural forms
- 4.1.2: Schwa Lowering is not cyclic
- 4.1.3: Is Schwa Lowering a post-lexical rule?
- 4.2: a Deletion
- 4.2.1: a Deletion is not cyclic
- 4.2.2: a Deletion is not post-lexical
- 4.2.3: a Deletion is a level 5 rule
- 4.3: Non-cyclic rules: summary
- 5: Conclusion
- Notes
- Appendix: Sekani Rules
- References
- Volume 07
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- Preface
- List of Transcription Symbols for English
- Chapter 1: Phonemic and phonetic
- Chapter 2: Phonemes in sequence
- Chapter 3: Distinctive features
- Chapter 4: Neutralization, marking and language universals
- Chapter 5: Phonology and morphology
- Chapter 6: Connected speech
- Chapter 7: Intonation
- Chapter 8: Dialect, accent
- Chapter 9: Sound change
- Chapter 10: Acquisition, normal and delayed
- Glossary of terms used in the description of speech sounds
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
- Volume 08
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Table of Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Illustrations
- Part I
- Chapter I: Introduction
- 1: Purposes of this Work
- 1.1: Front Vocoids and Coronal Consonants
- 1.2: Redefining [coronal]
- 1.3: The Representation of Consonant/Vowel Interaction
- 2: Background Assumptions
- 2.1: Nonlinear Phonology
- 2.2: Underspecification
- 3: Organization of this Study
- Chapter II: Phonetic Correlates of [Coronal]
- 0: Introduction
- 1: Topology of the Tongue
- 2: Articulatory Description of [Coronal]
- 2.1: Hungarian Palatals
- 3: The Coronality of Front Vowels
- 4: Acoustic Properties of Coronal Sounds
- 5: Summary
- Chapter III: The Feature Specification of Coronals
- 0: Introduction
- 1: Front Vocoids
- 1.1: Spanish
- 2: Coronal Consonants
- 2.1: Anterior Coronals
- 2.2: Postalveolar Coronal Obstruents
- 2.3: Palatalized Consonants
- 2.4: Alveopalatals
- 2.5: Summary
- 3: Coronal Sonorant Consonants
- 4: Summary
- Chapter IV: The Nonlinear Organization of Consonant and Vowel Features
- 0: Introduction
- 1: Incorporating [coronal] into a Nonlinear Model of Feature Organization
- 1.1: Sanskrit
- 1.2: Basque (Baztan dialect)
- 1.3: Summary
- 2: Feature Theory
- 3: Feature Organization
- 3.1: Major and Minor Articulations
- 4: Spreading Constraints
- 4.1: Summary
- 5: Cooccurrence Constraints and Dissimilation
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