Results 311 to 320 of about 2,021,560 (340)
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Mutation rules and ordering in phonology

Journal of Linguistics, 1969
The following thoughts were stimulated primarily as a result of correspondence with Joseph L. Malone of Columbia University, and partly by reading Noam Chomsky's recent paper in Language (Chomsky, 1967).
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Rules, Constraints, and Phonological Phenomena

2008
© Oxford University Press, 2013. All Rights Reserved.This book contains new work by prominent phonologists and it goes to the heart of current debates in phonological and linguistic theory: should the explanation of phonological variety be constraint or rule-based and, in the light of the resolution of this question, how in the mind does phonology ...
Andrew Nevins, Bert Vaux
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Formal Properties of Phonological Rules

1977
One of the salient features of generative phonology has been the emphasis put on formal questions. The study of abstract properties of grammars has been the distinctive concern of work carried out in the field and most of the research has been aimed at discovering formal universals.
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On the functional diversity of phonological rules

Journal of Linguistics, 1976
The primary aim of this paper is to show by the analysis of an extended example that a phonological description which recognizes the functional variety of phonological description which recognizes the functional variety of phonological rules is more illuminating than one in which the data are handled merely as the output of a set of completely ...
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Phonological rules in young children

Journal of Child Language, 1974
ABSTRACTThere are very general phonological processes which appear to operate in one form or another when any child learns a first language. This study attempts to outline and exemplify the most general of these, e.g. the reduction of consonant clusters, the deletion of unstressed syllables.
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On the unreality of some phonological rules

Lingua, 1976
Abstract The results of a number of experiments reported in the literature suggest that some supposedly productive rules lack psychological reality. The implication of these results for the theory of generative phonology is sometimes ignored on the grounds that these results reflect speakers' ‘performance’ rather than ‘competence’. Given this type of
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On Constraining Global Rules in Phonology

Language, 1975
Kiparsky 1973b proposes a number of constraints on global rules. All his examples are of the type where derived strings become separated, in terms of their behavior, from otherwise identical underlying strings. This paper will argue for cases of global rules that do not meet Kiparsky's conditions.
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On phonological representations, rules, and opacity

Lingua, 1975
Abstract A fundamental concept of standard generative phonology stating that related morphemes have unique phonological representations is criticized. It is argued that much more morphologization of so-called phonological rules is needed to explain certain morphophonemic changes and that rules should be restricted to apply where the morphemic ...
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