Notice bibliographique
- Notice
Type(s) de contenu et mode(s) de consultation : Texte noté : sans médiation
Auteur(s) : Hulst, Harry van der (1953-....)
Titre(s) : Principles of radical CV phonology [Texte imprimé] : a theory of segmental and syllabic structure / Harry van der Hulst ; with the editorial assistance of Jeroen van de Weijer
Publication : Edinburgh : Edinburgh university press, copyright 2020
Description matérielle : XIV-497 pages : illustrations (black and white) ; 24 cm
Collection : Edinburgh studies in theoretical linguistics ; 4
Lien à la collection : Edinburgh studies in theoretical linguistics
Note(s) : Bibliogr. p. 431-478. - Index
Autre(s) auteur(s) : Weijer, Jeroen van de (1965-....). Éditeur scientifique
Sujet(s) : Phonologie
Segmentation (linguistique)
Grammaire générative
Identifiants, prix et caractéristiques : ISBN 1474454666. - ISBN 9781474454667 (rel). - ISBN 9781474454681 (erroné). - ISBN
9781474454698 (erroné)
Identifiant de la notice : ark:/12148/cb46598527c
Notice n° :
FRBNF46598527
(notice reprise d'un réservoir extérieur)
Table des matières : Machine generated contents note:1.. Basic assumptions about phonology -- ; 2.. Background:
Dependency and Government Phonology -- ; 3.. Radical CV Phonology -- ; 4.. Manner
-- ; 5.. Place -- ; 6.. Laryngeal: phonation and tone -- ; 7.. Special structures
-- ; 8.. Predictability and preference -- ; 9.. Minimal specification -- ; 10.. Radical
CV Phonology applied to sign phonology -- ; 11.. Comparison to other models -- ; 12..
Conclusions -- ; ch. 1. Basic assumptions about phonology -- ; 1.1.. Introduction
-- ; 1.2.. What is phonology? -- ; 1.3.. Six theses concerning phonological primes
-- ; 1.3.1.. Are features based on perception or articulation? -- ; 1.3.2.. Are features
innate? -- ; 1.3.3.. Are features, or is phonology in general, substance-free? --
; 1.3.4.. Are phonological representations fully specified? -- ; 1.3.5.. Is there
such a thing as a segment inventory? -- ; 1.3.6.. Are there still phonemes? -- ; 1.4..
Is phonology different? -- ; 1.5. Alternations and processes -- ; 1.6.. Summary and
concluding remarks -- ; ch. 2. Background: Dependency and Government Phonology --
; 2.1.. Introduction -- ; 2.2.. Monovalency, grouping, dependency and contrastivity
-- ; 2.2.1.. Monovalency -- ; 2.2.2.. The triangular set -- ; 2.2.3.. Grouping and
elements in Dependency Phonology -- ; 2.2.4.. Developments in Dependency Phonology
-- ; 2.2.5.. Minimal specification and polysysternaticity -- ; 2.3.. Government Phonology
-- ; 2.4.. Towards Radical CV Phonology -- ; 2.5.. Summary and concluding remarks
-- ; ch. 3. Radical CV Phonology -- ; 3.1.. Introduction -- ; 3.2.. An outline of
Radical CV Phonology -- ; 3.2.1.. The segmental model -- ; 3.2.2.. Syllable structure
-- ; 3.2.3.. Empirical issues -- ; 3.2.4.. The segment-syllable connection -- ; 3.2.5..
Recursivity in syllables or foot structure in Radical CV Phonology -- ; 3.3.. Summary
and concluding remarks -- ; ch. 4. Manner -- ; 4.1.. Introduction -- ; 4.2. Onset
-- ; 4.2.1.. Edge (onset head): obstruents -- ; 4.2.1.1.. Edge (onset head): head
class -- ; 4.2.1.2.. Edge (onset head): dependent class -- ; 4.2.2.. Bridge (onset
dependent): sonorants -- ; 4.2.3.. Sonorant consonants as onset heads (including taps/flaps)
-- ; 4.2.4.. Laryngeal consonants -- ; 4.3.. Rhyme -- ; 4.3.1.. Nucleus (rhyme head):
vowels -- ; 4.3.1.1.. Nucleus (rhyme head): head class -- ; 4.3.1.2.. Nucleus (rhyme
head): dependent class -- ; 4.3.2.. Coda (rhyme dependent): sonorants -- ; 4.3.3..
Coda conditions -- ; 4.4.. Syllabic consonants (sonorants) -- ; 4.5.. Long vowels,
diphthongs and geminates -- ; 4.6.. Summary and concluding remarks -- ; ch. 5. Place
-- ; 5.1.. Introduction -- ; 5.2.. Edge (onset head): obstruents -- ; 5.2.1.. Edge
(onset head): head class -- ; 5.2.2.. Edge (onset head): dependent class -- ; 5.2.3..
Post-velar consonants: pharyngeals and laryngeals -- ; 5.2.4.. Place distinctions
for sonorant consonants in the edge ; 5.3.. Nucleus (rhyme head): vowels -- ; 5.3.1..
Nucleus (rhyme head): head class -- ; 5.3.2.. Nucleus (rhyme head): dependent class
-- ; 5.3.3.. Syllabic consonants (sonorants) -- ; 5.4.. Bridge and coda -- ; 5.5..
Summary and concluding remarks -- ; ch. 6. Laryngeal: phonation and tone -- ; 6.1..
Introduction -- ; 6.2.. Edge (onset head): consonants (phonation) -- ; 6.3.. Nucleus
(rhyme head): vowels (tone) -- ; 6.4.. Four issues -- ; 6.4.1.. Phonation oppositions
in obstruents and sonorants -- ; 6.4.2.. Laryngeal realism -- ; 6.4.3.. Phonation
in the nucleus -- ; 6.4.4.. The correlation between tone and phonation -- ; 6.5..
Bridge and coda -- ; 6.6.. Summary and concluding remarks -- ; ch. 7. Special structures
-- ; 7.1.. Introduction -- ; 7.2.. Incomplete structures -- ; 7.2.1.. No content at
all -- ; 7.2.1.1.. Vowel/zero alternations -- ; 7.2.1.2.. Consonant clusters -- ;
7.2.1.3.. Initial geminates -- ; 7.2.1.4.. Schwa -- ; 7.2.1.5onants in the edge. Consonant/zero
alternations -- ; 7.2.1.6.. Ghost consonants -- ; 7.2.1.7.. Morphological templates
-- ; 7.2.2.. Partial content -- ; 7.2.2.1.. No'no manner' -- ; 7.2.2.2.. Manner only
-- ; 7.3.. Overcomplete structures -- ; 7.3.1.. Complex consonants -- ; 7.3.1.1..
Affricates -- ; 7.3.1.2.. Consonants with secondary manner -- ; 7.3.1.3.. Consonants
with secondary place -- ; 7.3.2.. Consonants with two major places (clicks and multiply-articulated
consonants) -- ; 7.3.3.. Complex vowels -- ; 7.3.3.1.. Short diphthongs -- ; 7.3.3.2..
Vowels with contour tones -- ; 7.3.3.3.. Vowels with special phonation -- ; 7.3.3.4..
Vowels with special manner -- ; 7.3.4.. Branching syllabic constituents or `two-root
structures' -- ; 7.4.. Summary and concluding remarks -- ; ch. 8. Predictability and
preference -- ; 8.1.. Introduction -- ; 8.2.. Harmony -- ; 8.2.1.. Paradigmatic and
cross-class harmony -- ; 8.2.2.. Disharmony -- ; 8.3^. Schwa -- ; 7.2.1.5onants in
the edge. Preference rankings of segments per syllabic position -- ; 8.3.1.. Two determining
principles: harmony and dispersion -- ; 8.3.1.1.. Manner preferences -- ; 8.3.1.1.1..
Manner preferences: edge -- ; 8.3.1.1.2.. Manner preferences: nucleus -- ; 8.3.1.1.3..
Manner preferences: bridge and coda -- ; 8.3.1.2.. Place preferences -- ; 8.3.1.2.1..
Place preferences: edge -- ; 8.3.1.2.2.. Place preferences: nucleus -- ; 8.3.1.3..
Laryngeal preferences -- ; 8.3.1.3.1.. Laryngeal preferences: edge (phonation) --
; 8.3.1.3.2.. Laryngeal preferences: nucleus (tone) -- ; 8.3.1.4.. Concluding remarks
-- ; 8.4.. Preferred segmental systems -- ; 8.4.1.. The overall structure of segmental
systems -- ; 8.4.2.. Polysystematicity -- ; 8.4.3.. Conclusions -- ; 8.5.. Summary
and concluding remarks -- ; ch. 9. Minimal specification -- ; 9.1.. Introduction --
; 9.2.. A typology of redundant properties -- ; 9.3.. Radical underspecification --
; 9.4^chwa -- ; 7.2.1.5onants in the edge. Contrastive and radical underspecification
in a unary framework -- ; 9.5.. Markedness, complexity and salience -- ; 9.6.. Examples
of minimal specification -- ; 9.7.. Can redundant elements become active? -- ; 9.8..
Constraints and learnability -- ; 9.9.. Summary and concluding remarks -- ; ch. 10.
Radical CV Phonology applied to sign phonology -- ; 10.1.. Introduction -- ; 10.2..
The macrostructure of signs -- ; 10.3.. The microstructure of signs -- ; 10.3.1..
The articulator -- ; 10.3.1.1.. FingerSelection -- ; 10.3.1.2.. FingerConfiguration
-- ; 10.3.2.. Orientation -- ; 10.3.3.. Place -- ; 10.3.4.. Manner (`movement') --
; 10.4.. Two-handed signs -- ; 10.5.. What about syllable structure? -- ; 10.6.. Summary
and concluding remarks -- ; ch. 11. Comparison to other models -- ; 11.1.. Introduction
-- ; 11.2.. Feature Geometry models -- ; 11.3.. Other models -- ; 11.3.1.. Dependency
models -- ; 11.3.2.. The nested subregister model -- ; 11.3.3 in the edge. The Toronto
model -- ; 11.3.4.. The parallel structure model -- ; 11.3.5.. The channel-neutral
model -- ; 11.3.6.. The Duanmu model -- ; 11.3.7.. Government Phonology 2.0 -- ; 11.3.8..
Q-theory -- ; 11.4.. Summary and concluding remarks -- ; ch. 12. Conclusions -- ;
12.1.. Introduction -- ; 12.2.. Goals and basic principles -- ; 12.3.. X-bar structure
everywhere -- ; 12.4.. Strengths and weaknesses -- ; 12.5.. Some unresolved issues
-- ; 12.6.. What's next?.