Input Optimisation: phonology and morphology

In this paper, I provide a unified account of three frequency effects in phonology. First, typologically marked elements are underrepresented. Second, phonological changes are underrepresented. Third, morphologically conditioned phonological changes are overrepresented. These effects are demonstrate...

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Main Author: Hammond, Michael
Other Authors: University of Arizona
Language:en
Published: CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS 2017
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/623075
http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/623075
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-6230752017-04-12T03:00:35Z Input Optimisation: phonology and morphology Hammond, Michael University of Arizona In this paper, I provide a unified account of three frequency effects in phonology. First, typologically marked elements are underrepresented. Second, phonological changes are underrepresented. Third, morphologically conditioned phonological changes are overrepresented. These effects are demonstrated with corpus data from English and Welsh. I show how all three effects follow from a simple conception of phonological complexity. Further, I demonstrate how this notion of complexity makes predictions about other phenomena in these languages, and that these predictions are borne out. I model this with traditional Optimality Theory, but the proposal is consistent with any constraint-based formalism that weights constraints in some way. 2017-01-16 Article Input Optimisation: phonology and morphology 2017, 33 (03):459 Phonology 0952-6757 1469-8188 10.1017/S095267571600021X http://hdl.handle.net/10150/623075 http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/623075 Phonology en https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/S095267571600021X/type/journal_article © Cambridge University Press 2017 CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
description In this paper, I provide a unified account of three frequency effects in phonology. First, typologically marked elements are underrepresented. Second, phonological changes are underrepresented. Third, morphologically conditioned phonological changes are overrepresented. These effects are demonstrated with corpus data from English and Welsh. I show how all three effects follow from a simple conception of phonological complexity. Further, I demonstrate how this notion of complexity makes predictions about other phenomena in these languages, and that these predictions are borne out. I model this with traditional Optimality Theory, but the proposal is consistent with any constraint-based formalism that weights constraints in some way.
author2 University of Arizona
author_facet University of Arizona
Hammond, Michael
author Hammond, Michael
spellingShingle Hammond, Michael
Input Optimisation: phonology and morphology
author_sort Hammond, Michael
title Input Optimisation: phonology and morphology
title_short Input Optimisation: phonology and morphology
title_full Input Optimisation: phonology and morphology
title_fullStr Input Optimisation: phonology and morphology
title_full_unstemmed Input Optimisation: phonology and morphology
title_sort input optimisation: phonology and morphology
publisher CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/623075
http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/623075
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