English syllabification and schwa-insertion: from the sound pattern of English to the notion of phase

It is a well-known fact that in English, syllabification of derived words differs according to the attaching affix, Chomsky and Halle (1968). In words such as hinder, meter, burgle the final sonorant of the roots /hindr/, /mitr/, /burgl/ is syllabic in word final position, following the rule of sch...

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Main Author: Tatjana Marvin
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Znanstvena založba Filozofske fakultete Univerze v Ljubljani (Ljubljana University Press, Faculty of Arts) 2005-12-01
Series:Linguistica
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revije.ff.uni-lj.si/linguistica/article/view/4214
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spelling doaj-45120e91c7454b628e675cdba7f3c4db2020-11-24T21:04:50ZdeuZnanstvena založba Filozofske fakultete Univerze v Ljubljani (Ljubljana University Press, Faculty of Arts)Linguistica0024-39222350-420X2005-12-01451English syllabification and schwa-insertion: from the sound pattern of English to the notion of phaseTatjana Marvin0University of Ljubljana It is a well-known fact that in English, syllabification of derived words differs according to the attaching affix, Chomsky and Halle (1968). In words such as hinder, meter, burgle the final sonorant of the roots /hindr/, /mitr/, /burgl/ is syllabic in word final position, following the rule of schwa insertion that makes a final sonorant pre­ ceded by a consonant syllabic. However, in related forms where these roots are fol­ lowed by a vowel-initial affix, such as hindrance, metric, burglar, the sonorants in ques­ tion are not syllabic, but are syllabified as onsets of the following syllable. Not all affixes beginning in a vowel have the same effect on syllabification. The participle forming affix -ing triggers the schwa-insertion regardless of its vowel-initial status, e.g. (hinder /hindgr/: hindrance /hindrans/, but hindering /hindgril]/, */hindril]/). Chomsky and Halle (1968) treat this property as inherent to the attaching affix; i.e. -ance in hin­ drance differs from -ing in hindering with respect to the triggering of the schwa-insertion rule. Using a finer-grained syntax of words, this paper derives the differences in pronunciation of the above mentioned words as following not exclusively from a diacritic on the affix, as in Chomsky and Halle (1968), but rather from the attachment position of the affix in the syntactic structure of the word. https://revije.ff.uni-lj.si/linguistica/article/view/4214English syllabification and schwa-insertionfrom the sound pattern of English to the notion of phase
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tatjana Marvin
spellingShingle Tatjana Marvin
English syllabification and schwa-insertion: from the sound pattern of English to the notion of phase
Linguistica
English syllabification and schwa-insertion
from the sound pattern of English to the notion of phase
author_facet Tatjana Marvin
author_sort Tatjana Marvin
title English syllabification and schwa-insertion: from the sound pattern of English to the notion of phase
title_short English syllabification and schwa-insertion: from the sound pattern of English to the notion of phase
title_full English syllabification and schwa-insertion: from the sound pattern of English to the notion of phase
title_fullStr English syllabification and schwa-insertion: from the sound pattern of English to the notion of phase
title_full_unstemmed English syllabification and schwa-insertion: from the sound pattern of English to the notion of phase
title_sort english syllabification and schwa-insertion: from the sound pattern of english to the notion of phase
publisher Znanstvena založba Filozofske fakultete Univerze v Ljubljani (Ljubljana University Press, Faculty of Arts)
series Linguistica
issn 0024-3922
2350-420X
publishDate 2005-12-01
description It is a well-known fact that in English, syllabification of derived words differs according to the attaching affix, Chomsky and Halle (1968). In words such as hinder, meter, burgle the final sonorant of the roots /hindr/, /mitr/, /burgl/ is syllabic in word final position, following the rule of schwa insertion that makes a final sonorant pre­ ceded by a consonant syllabic. However, in related forms where these roots are fol­ lowed by a vowel-initial affix, such as hindrance, metric, burglar, the sonorants in ques­ tion are not syllabic, but are syllabified as onsets of the following syllable. Not all affixes beginning in a vowel have the same effect on syllabification. The participle forming affix -ing triggers the schwa-insertion regardless of its vowel-initial status, e.g. (hinder /hindgr/: hindrance /hindrans/, but hindering /hindgril]/, */hindril]/). Chomsky and Halle (1968) treat this property as inherent to the attaching affix; i.e. -ance in hin­ drance differs from -ing in hindering with respect to the triggering of the schwa-insertion rule. Using a finer-grained syntax of words, this paper derives the differences in pronunciation of the above mentioned words as following not exclusively from a diacritic on the affix, as in Chomsky and Halle (1968), but rather from the attachment position of the affix in the syntactic structure of the word.
topic English syllabification and schwa-insertion
from the sound pattern of English to the notion of phase
url https://revije.ff.uni-lj.si/linguistica/article/view/4214
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