Prosodic morphology: Constraint interaction and satisfaction (original) (raw)

Prosodic Morphology : The Handbook of Phonological Theory

2018

In short, the theory of prosodic morphology says that templates and circumscription must be formulated in terms of the vocabulary of prosody and must respect the well-formedness requirements of prosody. Earlier proposals for including prosody in templatic morphology include McCarthy (1979), Nash (1980, p. 139), Marantz (1982), Yip (1982, 1983), Levin (1983), Broselow and McCarthy (1983), Archangeli (1983, 1984), McCarthy (1984a, 1984b), and Lowenstamm and Kaye (1986). Prosodic morphology extends this approach to the claim that only prosody may play this role, and that the role includes circumscription as well.

Prosodic morphology I: Constraint interaction and satisfaction

1993

Prosodic Morphology (McCarthy and Prince 1986 et seq.) is a theory of how morphological and phonological determinants of linguistic form interact with one another in a grammatical system. More specifically, it is a theory of how prosodic structure impinges on templatic and circumscriptional morphology, such as reduplication and infixation. There are three essential claims:

Prosodic morphology 1986

1996

Abstract This work has circulated in manuscript form since October, 1986. Its basic contents were first presented at WCCFL 3 in spring, 1986 to an audience that was not devoid of convinced believers in the C and the V. It has been cited variously as McCarthy & Prince 1986, M&P forthcoming, and even (optimistically) M&P in press.

Two Lectures on Prosodic Morphology

1994

This document contains handouts and transcripts (prepared from a contemporaneous tape recording) of two lectures presented at the OTS/HIL Workshop on Prosodic Morphology, held at the University of Utrecht, June 22-24, 1994. We are grateful to the participants in the Workshop and to the organizers, René Kager, Harry van der Hulst, and Wim Zonneveld. The article "Reduplicative Identity" is an exploration of some of the points raised in the second lecture.

Lectures on prosodic morphology

1991

This document contains handouts and transcripts (prepared from a contemporaneous tape recording) of two lectures presented at the OTS/HIL Workshop on Prosodic Morphology, held at the University of Utrecht, June 22–24, 1994. We are grateful to the participants in the Workshop and to the organizers, René Kager, Harry van der Hulst, and Wim Zonneveld.

The role of the prosodic word in phonotactic generalizations

1999

In traditional generative phonology, phonotactic generalisations were expressed by conditions on underlying forms of morphemes (morpheme structure conditions), in combination with the set of phonological rules (cf. Postal 1968). It is the claim of this paper to show that the phonotactics of morphemes should be accounted for primarily in terms of properties of prosodie constituents such as the syllable, the foot, and the prosodie word, three uncontroversial categories of the prosodie hierarchy. I will focus on the role of the prosodie word because the phonotactic role of that prosodie constituent has been somewhat neglected compared to that of, in particular, the syllable. A second claim, intimately connected to the previous one, is that the relevant constraints pertain to the surface level, i.e. they are output constraints. In other words, they do not function as constraints on underlying forms.

On the simultaneity of morphological and prosodic structure

1993

Data Studies in Lexical phonology /edited by Sharon Hurgiis and Ellen M. Kaisse. p. cm. -(Phonetics and phonology ; v. 4) Includes index. ISBN 0-12-325070-6 (Hardcover) ISBN 0-12-325071-4 (Paperback) I. Lexical phonology. I. Hargus, Sharon II. Kaisse, Ellen M. III. Series. P217.62.L49 1993 414-dc2() 92-23535 CII' PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA 93 94 95 96 97 98 QW 9X7654321