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41
Elip, Mmala and Yangben
Boyd, Ginger; Reeder, JeDene; Roberts, David. - : John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2021
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42
Epilogue
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43
Idaasha
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44
Nateni
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45
Eastern Dan
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46
Mbelime
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47
Introduction
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48
Ife
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49
Between Stress and Tone: Acoustic Evidence of Word Prominence in Kurtöp
Hyslop, Gwendolyn. - : University of Hawaii Press, 2021
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50
Neutral Tone in Mandarin: Representation and Interaction with Utterance-level Prosody
Zhang, Yixin. - : University of Cambridge, 2021. : Selwyn, 2021
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51
Lexical tone perception in Mandarin Chinese speakers with aphasia
Müller, Nicole; Du, Yunling; Li, Qiang. - : De Gruyter, 2021
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52
The Perception, Processing and Learning of Mandarin Lexical Tone by Second Language Speakers
Ling, Wenyi. - : University of Hawai'i at Manoa, 2021
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53
Mandarin Tone Acquisition as a Multimodal Learning Problem: Tone 3 Diacritic Manipulation
Bramlett, Adam. - 2021
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54
Between Stress and Tone: Acoustic Evidence of Word Prominence in Kurtöp
Hyslop, Gwendolyn. - : University of Hawaii Press, 2021
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55
Modeling phonological interactions using recursive schemes
Abstract: This dissertation pursues a computational theory of phonological process interactions whereby individual processes are formalized as input-output mappings (i.e. functions), and interactions are the combinations of those functions using a set of two operators: one previously defined in the literature and another defined in this dissertation. Building on hypotheses regarding the computational complexity of phonological processes in isolation (Heinz and Lai, 2013), the primary novel contribution of this dissertation is to extend these insights to interactions within larger phonological grammars, but in a systematic way. Specifically, it shows that the subsequential class of functions, sufficient to describe a great majority of phonological generalizations in isolation, also provides a well-motivated upper bound on the complexity of phonological interactions. Analyses developed in this work offer a straightforward solution to a number of outstanding cases of interactions in the Chinese tone sandhi literature. Crucially, this includes sandhi paradigms for which traditional generative phonological theories (rule-based SPE (Chomsky and Halle, 1968) and Optimality Theory (Prince and Smolensky, 2004)) fail to account. Thus this novel approach permits an explicit, restrictive theory of phonological interactions whose predictions more closely align with attested data. The formal apparatus for defining functions and operators used in this work is boolean monadic recursive schemes (BMRS; Bhaskar et al., 2020; Chandlee and Jardine, 2020). BMRS are a logical formalism rooted in theoretical computer science, and have been recently applied to computational analyses of phonology. Thus another important contribution of this dissertation is that it represents the first major work using BMRS to explore a specific type of linguistic phenomenon. In addition to demonstrating its application to specific tone sandhi paradigms, this study identifies advantages to BMRS in modeling interactions more generally, especially in comparison to other computational formalisms. The dissertation also leverages the phenomenon-independent nature of this logical formalism by applying BMRS to questions of phonological representation. Specifically, it is shown how operations over BMRS contribute to recent computational work using model theory and logic to explore notational equivalence across representational theories (Strother-Garcia and Heinz, 2015; Danis and Jardine, 2019; Oakden, 2020). ; Ph.D. ; Includes bibliographical references
Keyword: Computational phonology; Linguistics; Phonological interactions; Tone sandhi
URL: http://dissertations.umi.com/gsnb.rutgers:11413
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56
The impact of textual features on cost of equity capital : the case of UK annual reports
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57
A description and analysis of the syntax and functions of subordinate clauses in Teotitlán del Valle Zapotec (with an introductory overview of TdVZ phonology and morphosyntax)
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58
The Effects of multilingualism and Music Experience on Tone and Vowel Discrimination Ability
In: Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository (2021)
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59
Factors affecting the incidental formation of novel suprasegmental categories
Wright, Jonathan. - : University of Oregon, 2021
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60
LANGUAGE CONTACT AND COVERT PROMINENCE IN THE SḤERĒT-JIBBĀLI LANGUAGE OF OMAN
In: Theses and Dissertations--Linguistics (2021)
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