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Steriade, Donca (1988). Review of Clements & Keyser (1983).
Language 64(1):118-129.
Available on 2-hour reserve and
e-reserve for
this course.
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Hayes, Bruce (1989). Compensatory lengthening in moraic
phonology. Linguistic Inquiry 20(2):253-306.
You can find Linguistic Inquiry
in the stacks in Davis Library.
Suggested focus for a long reading reaction: Does Hayes prefer a
theory of subsyllabic structure/syllable weight that makes use of
moras, or one that makes use of X (C/V) slots? What evidence does
he give to support his choice? (sections 3 & 4)
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Morén, Bruce (1999). Distinctiveness, Coercion, and Sonority: A
Unified Theory of Weight. PhD dissertation, U Maryland.
This dissertation is available in MS Word format
on ROA, #346,
but my virus checker told me some of the online files have a virus.
Here are clean copies of the chapter files in PDF format:
Ch 1 (+ T of C)
|
Ch 2
|
Ch 3
|
Ch 4
|
Ch 5 (+ biblio.)
Suggested focus for a long reading reaction: Look at
Ch 1, which gives an overview of the dissertation, and find a topic
that looks interesting. Then use the Table of Contents (included in
the Ch 1 file) to find where Morén talks about that topic, and read
the appropriate section.
One idea: Morén claims that "coerced" weight obeys Zec's
generalization about sonority levels for moraic segments, but
"distinctive" weight does not. What are coerced and distinctive
weight? What are a few examples of distinctive weight not obeying
Zec's generalization? How does Morén account for this difference
between coerced and distinctive weight in his theory?
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Gerfen, Chip (to appear). Andalusian codas. To appear in
Probus.
This paper examines phonetic data that Broselow,
Chen, & Huffman's (1997) approach wouldn't be able to explain.
You can download a
PDF version from Chip's web site.
Suggested focus for a long reading reaction:
- Descriptively, what is the
phenomenon called "s-aspiration" that this paper is concerned with?
Note that this term is not used in exactly the same sense as for, e.g.,
the "aspiration" of a stop in English. (section 1; section 2.3)
- Why does Gerfen argue that assuming a mora-sharing
structure, as in Figure 19 (based on the proposal in BCH 1997),
is not detailed enough to predict the outcome of s-aspiration?
- Why does Gerfen argue against a place-assimilation
account of s-aspiration, as in Figure 23?
- You do not need to provide detailed discussion of the
phonetic experiments (section 2.1, 2.2), or of the "gestural phonology"
and "aperture geometry" models that are discussed in section 3,
because these are frameworks that haven't been covered in class.
-
Clements, G.N. (1990). The role of the sonority cycle in core
syllabification. In John Kingston and Mary E. Beckman, eds.,
Papers in
Laboratory Phonology I: Between the Grammar and Physics of
Speech. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 283-325.
This paper develops a more formal theory of sonority, based on
the major-class features of segments ([vocalic]=[consonantal],
[sonorant], and a newly
proposed feature [approximant]).
The book containing this
paper is on overnight reserve (not e-reserve) in Davis Library.
-
Selkirk, Elisabeth O. (1984). On the major class features and
syllable theory. In M. Aronoff and R.T. Oerhle, eds.,
Language Sound Structure: Studies in Phonology Dedicated to Morris
Halle by his Teacher and Students.
Cambridge: MIT Press, 107-113.
This paper, which predates Clements', takes a different view of the
relationship between sonority and major-class features.
The book containing this
paper is on overnight reserve (not e-reserve) in Davis Library.
In addition to examining either Clements (1990) or Selkirk (1984)
in a reading reaction, another option would be to
compare the ways
these two papers propose to relate sonority and segmental features.
- Some papers from the
Rutgers Optimality Archive
related to syllable structure -- the links below take you to
the ROA abstract page for each paper, where you can find
a short abstract of the paper and links for downloading it in
one or more file formats.
-
#111: Barlow (1996). The development of onglides in American English.
NOTE: Click here for a
PDF version of this paper.
-
#142: Walker (1994). Buriat syllable weight and head prominence.
NOTE: Click here for a
PDF version of this paper.
-
#180: Hume (1997). Metathesis in phonological theory: The case of
Leti.
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#230: Carlson (1997). Sonority and reduplication in Nakanai and
Nuxalk (Bella Coola).
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#291: Face (1998). Re-examining Spanish 'resyllabification'.
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#335: Alber & Plag (1999). Epenthesis, deletion and the emergence of
the optimal syllable in Creole.
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#381: Gussenhoven (2000). Vowel duration, syllable quantity and
stress in Dutch.
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#383: Morris (in press). Coda obstruents and local constraint
conjunction in north-central Peninsular Spanish.
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#408: Pineros (2000). Segment-to-syllable alignment and vocalization
in Chilean Spanish.
-
#448: Goad & Rose (to appear). Input elaboration, head faithfulness
and evidence for representation in the acquisition of left-edge clusters
in West Germanic.
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#491: Gouskova (to appear). Falling sonority onsets, loanwords,
and syllable contact.