Syntax-phonology mapping and the Tongan DP

Tongan, a Polynesian language, is almost entirely head-initial. There are some exceptions to this, including Demonstrative enclitics and the so-called Definitive Accent (Churchward 1953), which appears to be a stress-shift operation, typically in the rightmost word of the DP. One question that arise...

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Main Author: Byron Ahn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Library of Humanities 2016-04-01
Series:Glossa
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.glossa-journal.org/articles/39
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spelling doaj-6cb8a6a0f71d4f7187513333c10d295b2021-09-02T10:33:14ZengOpen Library of HumanitiesGlossa2397-18352016-04-011110.5334/gjgl.392Syntax-phonology mapping and the Tongan DPByron Ahn0Swarthmore CollegeTongan, a Polynesian language, is almost entirely head-initial. There are some exceptions to this, including Demonstrative enclitics and the so-called Definitive Accent (Churchward 1953), which appears to be a stress-shift operation, typically in the rightmost word of the DP. One question that arises here is: where does the morphophonological status of being an enclitic come from – particularly in a rather radically head-initial language? By investigating the distributional properties of the Definitive Accent, it will become clear that this is the result of syntactic and phonological structures proceeding without any direct appeal to morphophonological properties. A new formal analysis presented here derives the positions of the Definitive Accent and possible prosodic phrasings, appealing to independently motivated phonological constraints applying to structures with three cross-linguistically supported movement operations. It is shown that achieving this requires neither including morpheme-indexed constraints, nor having lexemes pre-specified with morphophonological properties such as “enclitic” or “prefix”. Finally, Tongan Definitive Accents raise important issues about the immutability of phases. Specifically, it must be that Phonology may access and manipulate previously spelled out material in a way that Syntax cannot, which is in fact exactly what a Minimalist architecture predicts.http://www.glossa-journal.org/articles/39TonganSyntaxPhonologyMorphologyInterfaceProsody
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Byron Ahn
spellingShingle Byron Ahn
Syntax-phonology mapping and the Tongan DP
Glossa
Tongan
Syntax
Phonology
Morphology
Interface
Prosody
author_facet Byron Ahn
author_sort Byron Ahn
title Syntax-phonology mapping and the Tongan DP
title_short Syntax-phonology mapping and the Tongan DP
title_full Syntax-phonology mapping and the Tongan DP
title_fullStr Syntax-phonology mapping and the Tongan DP
title_full_unstemmed Syntax-phonology mapping and the Tongan DP
title_sort syntax-phonology mapping and the tongan dp
publisher Open Library of Humanities
series Glossa
issn 2397-1835
publishDate 2016-04-01
description Tongan, a Polynesian language, is almost entirely head-initial. There are some exceptions to this, including Demonstrative enclitics and the so-called Definitive Accent (Churchward 1953), which appears to be a stress-shift operation, typically in the rightmost word of the DP. One question that arises here is: where does the morphophonological status of being an enclitic come from – particularly in a rather radically head-initial language? By investigating the distributional properties of the Definitive Accent, it will become clear that this is the result of syntactic and phonological structures proceeding without any direct appeal to morphophonological properties. A new formal analysis presented here derives the positions of the Definitive Accent and possible prosodic phrasings, appealing to independently motivated phonological constraints applying to structures with three cross-linguistically supported movement operations. It is shown that achieving this requires neither including morpheme-indexed constraints, nor having lexemes pre-specified with morphophonological properties such as “enclitic” or “prefix”. Finally, Tongan Definitive Accents raise important issues about the immutability of phases. Specifically, it must be that Phonology may access and manipulate previously spelled out material in a way that Syntax cannot, which is in fact exactly what a Minimalist architecture predicts.
topic Tongan
Syntax
Phonology
Morphology
Interface
Prosody
url http://www.glossa-journal.org/articles/39
work_keys_str_mv AT byronahn syntaxphonologymappingandthetongandp
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