Ling 403/603 Introduction to Phonology - University of ...udel.edu/~koirala/phonology/day23.pdf ·...
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Transcript of Ling 403/603 Introduction to Phonology - University of ...udel.edu/~koirala/phonology/day23.pdf ·...
Nonlocal Environments in Phonology
Nonlocal Environments are the cases in which trigger of a phonological process can occur at an extended distance from the target (For example: long distance harmony)
Autosegmentalism (Goldsmith 1976):
Nonlocal processes are actually local.
All nonlocal operations are local on a tier; the set of tiers constrains the set of nonlocal environments.
Autosegmental Phonology
Introduced by Goldsmith (1976) in his dissertation.
Initially formalized to address tonal phenomenon.
Tones:
Pitch contrast, which is distinctive for words/word forms
Segments Tone
ma high ‘mother’
ma mid-high ‘hemp’
ma mid-low-high ‘horse’
ma high-low ‘scold’
The absolute slicing hypothesis:
In traditional phonology, a phonological representation is a complete transitive order of segments.
This means that for the all sounds in the representation:
1. Either sound A precedes sound B or sound B precedes sound A
2. If sound A precedes sound B and sound B precedes sound C, then sound A precedes sound C.
The consequence: Speech can be divided phonologically into isolated segments.
Autosegmental Phonology
Goldsmith observed that there was not always a one-to-one mapping of tones to syllables:
1. Two tones could occupy one syllable
2. Two syllables could be occupied by one tone.
Tones:
Pitch contrast, which is distinctive for words/word forms
Segments Tone
ma high ‘mother’
ma mid-high ‘hemp’
ma mid-low-high ‘horse’
ma high-low ‘scold’
Autosegmental Phonology
Non-linearity: Goldsmith proposed that phonological representations should be composed of multiple tiers of segments. The tiers correspond to the different gestures of speech and differ according to the features that are specified for the segments on them.
Here, we have a tonal tier where the segments are specified only for tones
and a second tier where segments are specified for all other features
Autosegmental Phonology
The lines that link segments on the tonal tier to the segments on the segmental tier are called association lines.
An association line between two segments on two tiers means they are articulated simultaneously.
Crucially, there need not be one to one mapping between segments of two tiers.
Here, we have a tonal tier where the segments are specified only for tones
and a second tier where segments are specified for all other features
Possible mapping relations
• One-to-one mapping corresponds to the traditional view of tonal association.
(Each tone is mapped to a single vowel)
• Many-to –one mapping tells that a single syllable is produced during the period
of two distinct tones.
• Multiple linking shows that 3 syllable are produced during the period of a single
low tone.
Rules in Autosegmental Phonology
• Though Autosegmental phonology is non-linear in its approach, it is still derivational in
nature.
(surface forms are derived from underlying forms via the application of rules)
• Linking: Lets look at the the case of nasal spreading in English: nasality spreads
from nasal consonant to a preceding vowel. For example, the vowel in can is nasalized
due to the following nasal consonant.
• An unbroken association line in the rule forms part of the structural description and is
to be read as already being present.
• The dashed line is the change and denotes spreading.
v
Rules in Autosegmental Phonology
• The case of nasal spreading in English: nasality spreads from nasal consonant to a
preceding vowel. For example, the vowel in can is nasalized due to the following nasal
consonant.
Advantage of this approach:• IT shows that there are not two [+nas] features which associate themselves with
two adjacent segments, but rather the same single feature applies to both
segments.
Rules in Autosegmental Phonology
• Delinking: An autosegmental rule can also delete an association line. Lets look at an
example of High tone shift in the Sukuma language of East Africa.
• The rule shows that the high tone shifts one syllable to the right.
• Broken association line represents deletion.
• The circle around the segment means that it is unassociated with a segment on
the adjacent tier.
Stability:Stability is a property of autosegments which means they remain present in the
representation even if those segments with which they are associated on another
tier are deleted via a rule.
No-crossing Constraint
• Lines associating segments on two tiers may not cross each other.
Contrast [can] vs. [film]
• This constraint is not language specific, but a constraint of the autosegmental theory in
general.
• The idea is to constrain the power of the theory. It serves to block the rule from
applying.
Evidence: Luganda Vowel Coalescence
Note:
1. The tone associated with [a] did not delete even when [a] deleted.
2. The tone associated with [a] shifts to the next syllable
“Tones operate on a separate level from vowels and consonants”
Example: Mende
Step 1: Tonal association – Associate tone to TBU
Step 2: Left to Right Tone spreading – Spread the tone to adjacent unassociated
TBUs
Vowel Harmony
Vowel harmony is a requirement found in many different languages by which
vowels in a certain domain agree in one or more phonetic features.
Turkish Vowel Harmony
1. Allomorphs of plural morpheme?
2. Rule that explains the alternation?
Vowel Harmony
Vowel harmony is a requirement found in many different languages by which
vowels in a certain domain agree in one or more phonetic features.
Turkish Vowel Harmony
1. Allomorphs of plural morpheme?
2. Rule that explains the alternation?
Back harmony:
V →[α back] / [α back] C0___