Revis(it)ing French palatalization

This paper explores the diachrony of French and reconsiders the classical analysis of French palatalizations. It is widely admitted that the transition from Latin dorsal stops to French palatal fricatives is triggered by an external palatalizing object which affects the constitution of the targeted...

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Main Authors: Ali Tifrit, Laurence Voeltzel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Library of Humanities 2016-06-01
Series:Glossa
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.glossa-journal.org/articles/55
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spelling doaj-5918fd395f1340d5829461a16a0123452021-09-02T03:03:03ZengOpen Library of HumanitiesGlossa2397-18352016-06-011110.5334/gjgl.5510Revis(it)ing French palatalizationAli Tifrit0Laurence Voeltzel1LLING UMR 6310 CNRS / University of NantesLLING UMR 6310 CNRS / University of NantesThis paper explores the diachrony of French and reconsiders the classical analysis of French palatalizations. It is widely admitted that the transition from Latin dorsal stops to French palatal fricatives is triggered by an external palatalizing object which affects the constitution of the targeted consonant. While this analysis can satisfyingly explain the palatalization of dorsals before /i/, it makes the palatalization before /a/, which occurred a few centuries later, completely opaque. Revising the internal structure and the melody used to describe segments (Government Phonology 2.0 – Pöchtrager 2006) allows us to give a unified analysis of both palatalizations: whether /i/ or /a/, the vocalic environment is indeed the trigger, as it interferes with the structure of dorsals and lead to internal changes. However, while /i/ adds palatality to the consonant, /a/, by its lack of melody (Pöchtrager & Živanović 2010), leads to an internal reconfiguration of the dorsal, which already contains <I>. In other words, we face two kinds of palatalization: an external one and an internal one. Furthermore, our analysis takes the intermediate stages from Latin dorsals to French palatals into consideration and attested dialectal variations observed in Northern France.http://www.glossa-journal.org/articles/55RomanceFrench dialectsDiachronyStructureElement TheoryGovernment ­Phonology 2.0
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ali Tifrit
Laurence Voeltzel
spellingShingle Ali Tifrit
Laurence Voeltzel
Revis(it)ing French palatalization
Glossa
Romance
French dialects
Diachrony
Structure
Element Theory
Government ­Phonology 2.0
author_facet Ali Tifrit
Laurence Voeltzel
author_sort Ali Tifrit
title Revis(it)ing French palatalization
title_short Revis(it)ing French palatalization
title_full Revis(it)ing French palatalization
title_fullStr Revis(it)ing French palatalization
title_full_unstemmed Revis(it)ing French palatalization
title_sort revis(it)ing french palatalization
publisher Open Library of Humanities
series Glossa
issn 2397-1835
publishDate 2016-06-01
description This paper explores the diachrony of French and reconsiders the classical analysis of French palatalizations. It is widely admitted that the transition from Latin dorsal stops to French palatal fricatives is triggered by an external palatalizing object which affects the constitution of the targeted consonant. While this analysis can satisfyingly explain the palatalization of dorsals before /i/, it makes the palatalization before /a/, which occurred a few centuries later, completely opaque. Revising the internal structure and the melody used to describe segments (Government Phonology 2.0 – Pöchtrager 2006) allows us to give a unified analysis of both palatalizations: whether /i/ or /a/, the vocalic environment is indeed the trigger, as it interferes with the structure of dorsals and lead to internal changes. However, while /i/ adds palatality to the consonant, /a/, by its lack of melody (Pöchtrager & Živanović 2010), leads to an internal reconfiguration of the dorsal, which already contains <I>. In other words, we face two kinds of palatalization: an external one and an internal one. Furthermore, our analysis takes the intermediate stages from Latin dorsals to French palatals into consideration and attested dialectal variations observed in Northern France.
topic Romance
French dialects
Diachrony
Structure
Element Theory
Government ­Phonology 2.0
url http://www.glossa-journal.org/articles/55
work_keys_str_mv AT alitifrit revisitingfrenchpalatalization
AT laurencevoeltzel revisitingfrenchpalatalization
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