Understanding allomorphy : perspectives from optimality theory
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Bibliographic Information
Understanding allomorphy : perspectives from optimality theory
(Advances in optimality theory)
Equinox, 2015
- : hb
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and indexes
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This volume is a collection of original contributions to the study of lexical allomorphy, with a focus on Optimality Theory's distinctive take on this topic. The chapters provide an up-to-date perspective on the advances in our understanding of allomorphy which Optimality Theory has been able to secure (in comparison with rule-based Generative Phonology). They also consider a number of important allomorphy questions which Optimality Theory has helped raise and address (e.g. the nature of inputs, the role of paradigms, the interaction of phonology with other modules of grammar, lexical storage vs computation, degrees of phonological (ir)regularity, subcategorization vs markedness). The contributors form an international array of linguists from North America and Europe. A broad variety of languages serve as the empirical base for the volume, either in detailed case studies (e.g. Burushaski, Catalan, English, French, Italian, Moroccan Arabic, Sahaptin) or in encompassing typological surveys. The volume is aimed at professional linguists with an interest in phonology, morphology, and the lexicon.With its broad coverage of allomorphy issues, the book's content will also lend itself to courses in phonology and morphology for advanced undergraduates and graduate students.
Table of Contents
Introduction by the Editors 1. The prenominal allomorphy syndrome Eulalia Bonet, Maria-Rosa Lloret and Joan Mascaro 2. Allomorphy in OT: The Italian mobile diphthongs Geert Booij and Bart van der Veer, Leiden University 3. L'allomorphie radicale dans les lexemes adjectivaux en francais. Le cas des adverbes en -ment Gilles Boye and Marc Plenat, Universite de Toulouse le Mirail 4. The nature of allomorphy and exceptionality: Evidence from Burushaski plurals Patrik Bye, University of Tromso 5. Obviative prefix allomorphy in Sahaptin and Nez Perce Sharon Hargus, University of Washington, Noel Rude, Education Department of the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation in Pendleton, Oregon and Virginia Beavert, University of Oregon and Heritage University 6. Phonologically conditioned suppletive allomorphy: Cross-linguistic results and theoretical consequences Mary Paster, Pomona College 7. Accentual allomorphs in East Slavic: An argument for inflection dependence Donca Steriade and Igor Yanovich, MIT 8. Syllable-counting allomorphy by prosodic templates Jochen Trommer, University of Leipzig 9. Lexical insertion occurs in the phonological component Matthew Wolf, University of Massachusetts
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