Restrições gradientes sobre relações entre vogais pré-tônicas e tônicas no léxico do português brasileiro

This paper contends that the two competing "rules" that the literature on Portuguese morphophonology has claimed to apply to the verb paradigm, namely, vowel height harmony and vowel lowering, are, in fact, phonotactic restrictions that apply, in a categorical fashion, to the inflected ver...

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Main Author: Eleonora Cavalcante Albano
Format: Article
Language:Portuguese
Published: Universidade Estadual de Campinas 2011-08-01
Series:Cadernos de Estudos Lingüísticos
Subjects:
Online Access:https://periodicos.sbu.unicamp.br/ojs/index.php/cel/article/view/8637116
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spelling doaj-7611eab3029b4ebc97b31f521a6ef3382021-06-21T13:17:31ZporUniversidade Estadual de CampinasCadernos de Estudos Lingüísticos2447-06862011-08-014010.20396/cel.v40i0.86371164827Restrições gradientes sobre relações entre vogais pré-tônicas e tônicas no léxico do português brasileiroEleonora Cavalcante Albano0Universidade Estadual de CampinasThis paper contends that the two competing "rules" that the literature on Portuguese morphophonology has claimed to apply to the verb paradigm, namely, vowel height harmony and vowel lowering, are, in fact, phonotactic restrictions that apply, in a categorical fashion, to the inflected verb stem and, in a gradient fashion, to the non-inflected verb stem. At least in Brazilian Portuguese, the non-inflected verb stem is consistent with the inflected verb stem in that lowering predominates in both in the first conjugation and harmony predominates in both in the second and third conjugation. Lowering is in turn consistent with other versions of OCP which cut across all grammatical categories. The findings are interpreted in light of Acoustic-Articulatory Phonology (Albano 2001), which predicts, on grounds of facilitation of decoding of acoustic-to-articulatory relations, that stress tends to attract low vowels except where vowel quality is otherwise predictable.https://periodicos.sbu.unicamp.br/ojs/index.php/cel/article/view/8637116Linguística.
collection DOAJ
language Portuguese
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eleonora Cavalcante Albano
spellingShingle Eleonora Cavalcante Albano
Restrições gradientes sobre relações entre vogais pré-tônicas e tônicas no léxico do português brasileiro
Cadernos de Estudos Lingüísticos
Linguística.
author_facet Eleonora Cavalcante Albano
author_sort Eleonora Cavalcante Albano
title Restrições gradientes sobre relações entre vogais pré-tônicas e tônicas no léxico do português brasileiro
title_short Restrições gradientes sobre relações entre vogais pré-tônicas e tônicas no léxico do português brasileiro
title_full Restrições gradientes sobre relações entre vogais pré-tônicas e tônicas no léxico do português brasileiro
title_fullStr Restrições gradientes sobre relações entre vogais pré-tônicas e tônicas no léxico do português brasileiro
title_full_unstemmed Restrições gradientes sobre relações entre vogais pré-tônicas e tônicas no léxico do português brasileiro
title_sort restrições gradientes sobre relações entre vogais pré-tônicas e tônicas no léxico do português brasileiro
publisher Universidade Estadual de Campinas
series Cadernos de Estudos Lingüísticos
issn 2447-0686
publishDate 2011-08-01
description This paper contends that the two competing "rules" that the literature on Portuguese morphophonology has claimed to apply to the verb paradigm, namely, vowel height harmony and vowel lowering, are, in fact, phonotactic restrictions that apply, in a categorical fashion, to the inflected verb stem and, in a gradient fashion, to the non-inflected verb stem. At least in Brazilian Portuguese, the non-inflected verb stem is consistent with the inflected verb stem in that lowering predominates in both in the first conjugation and harmony predominates in both in the second and third conjugation. Lowering is in turn consistent with other versions of OCP which cut across all grammatical categories. The findings are interpreted in light of Acoustic-Articulatory Phonology (Albano 2001), which predicts, on grounds of facilitation of decoding of acoustic-to-articulatory relations, that stress tends to attract low vowels except where vowel quality is otherwise predictable.
topic Linguística.
url https://periodicos.sbu.unicamp.br/ojs/index.php/cel/article/view/8637116
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