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On the Pronunciation of Low Vowels in Japanese Newscaster’s Speech
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Lexeme frequency and intercultural communication ; 語の使用頻度と異文化間コミュニケーション
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Weak Edges and Final Geminates in Swiss German
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In: North East Linguistics Society (2020)
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On some phonological properties of the mimetic vocabulary component of Japanese
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Fully Distributing Morphology: The Phonology and Syntax of Latin Case Inflections
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Abstract:
Certain executions of minimalist syntax use "uninterpretable formal features." This term raises the question, do there really exist features of morpho-syntax that are {em never interpretable}, that play a role in neither Logical Form nor Phonological Form? Case features are in our view best analyzed as categorical head features that are realized on adjacent DPs. Case features are therefore uninterpretable only when they are not in their base positions; in their base position, they are simply categories such as V and P, and are interpretable. However, lexical features such as declension classes cannot be analyzed as "alternative realizations&rdquo of this sort, and so might be examples of purely "uninterpretable formal features.&rdquo We argue that Latin noun and adjective declension class feature bundles (e.g., [3rd declension, ablative, singular] ) are all better reanalyzed, on independent grounds, as spell outs of case and number suffixes whose forms depend only on the phonological features of the final segment of a preceding stem. Moreover, in almost all situations, these dependencies are phonetically natural. The "6 declension classes&rdquo of Latin are simply contextual variants fully determined by 6 possible values of preceding underlying final segments: consonants and 5 distinct vowels. That is, we argue that spell outs of features complexes such as [OBLIQUE, ±PLURAL] or [GENITIVE, ±PLURAL] do not depend on arbitrary uninterpretable morpheme class features. We claim rather that such constructs, at least in the well known Latin inflectional system, are entirely superfluous.
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URL: http://id.nii.ac.jp/1044/00000169/ https://shoin.repo.nii.ac.jp/?action=repository_uri&item_id=173 https://shoin.repo.nii.ac.jp/?action=repository_action_common_download&item_id=173&item_no=1&attribute_id=22&file_no=1
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11 |
Some Phonological and Morphological Patterns in the Latin Noun Declension System
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Weak Edges and Final Geminates in Swiss German ...
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Spaelti, Philip. - : GLSA (Graduate Linguistic Student Association), Dept. of Linguistics, University of Massachusetts, 2002
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Syllable recycling reduplication : A specific result of a comprehensive theory of infixing reduplication
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