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September 30, 2004

Only if and except when

I’ve been scribbling about triggering environments for diphthong raising in Canadian English for the last few days, because I keep hearing examples in my own speech that illustrate a complication in the process. The canonical pattern is that the low-nucleus diphthongs acquire a raised central nucleus before voiceless consonants (in the same word). Thus (roughly) [aw] and [aj] become [ʌw] and [ʌj]; the contrast is observable in pairs like ride [rajd] vs. write [rʌjt].
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Filed under General by Bob Kennedy @ 2:29 pm

Elsewhere and parenthesis notation

This is one of those posts where I just assume you’re a phonologist.

Suppose you have a set of rules that can be collapsed into a single rule A using SPE parenthesis notation, and another (nonabbreviated) rule B. Is it possible for A and B to be disjunctively ordered via the Elsewhere Condition — that is, is it possible to meet these two conditions?

  1. The structural changes (SCs) of the two rules conflict.
  2. The structural description (SD) of one of the rules properly includes the SD of the other.

The real difficulty is with (2). For starters, what is the SD of the abbreviated Rule A? Is it equivalent to the SD of its longest expansion, or something else?

An example might help.

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Filed under General by Eric Baković @ 2:54 am

September 27, 2004

Amateur transcibers

I have been scrolling through the pronunciation guide I mentioned in a comment about broadcasters’ rendering of Russian and other polysyllabic names. I guess I was thinking it would be a good source to check on how names are anglicized, since it provides “foh-NEH-tihk” pronunciations, including STRESS and a key for deciphering the transcriptions. Let me say here that I don’t consider it a fully reliable source for data.

A closer look on my part shows that it might need its own Cliff notes, since there are a few problems with symbol consistency. (more…)

Filed under General by Bob Kennedy @ 4:01 pm

September 22, 2004

Old World vs. New World phonology

By some trick of the human mind, Eric’s recent apology to the ‘Old World folks’ reminded me of Stephen Anderson. In his beautiful 1985 book Phonology in the Twentieth Century, Anderson wrote:

If a paper on ‘the morphosyntax of medial suffixes in Kickapoo�, bursting with unfamiliar forms and descriptive difficulties, is typical of American linguistics, its European counterpart is likely to be a paper on �l�arbitraire du signe� whose factual basis is limited to the observation that tree means �tree� in English, while arbre has essentially the same meaning in French.

This is obviously a caricature (of the way things were in the 1930s), and a funny one at that, but it is also acurate even to describe the current situation. A ‘typical’ American linguistics paper seems to be much more concerned with getting the facts right, whereas ‘typical’ European linguistics seems more interested in the overall structure of theories. The ‘typical’ American phonologists of today is studying brain scans, while his Old World colleague struggles with the definition of interconsonantal government. It’s not clear a priori which of those approaches will turn out to be most fruitful, and there are of course exceptions to the rule — Alan Prince, for instance, has won an honorary citizenship of the European Union with his work of the past few years; and there are many fine linguists in many parts of the world who behave sometimes as Old World, and as New World at other times. It is a mystery to me what explains this different academic and intellectual culture, especially since it seems to have been true for such a long time.

(The only linguistic fact in this post is about tree and arbre. My apologies, New World folks!)

[Update 04/09/23: The discussion is continued at Language Log]

Filed under General by Marc van Oostendorp @ 7:17 am

September 21, 2004

Italian vowel apocope description?

Yesterday’s NYT has a dreadful article about how Italian immigrants are “linguistically challenged” and “mangle” the pronunciation of words like prosciutto — the headline is “You Say Prosciutto, I say Pro-SHOOT, and Purists Cringe”.

Can anyone recommend a good description of vowel apocape across Italian dialects, or at least in a few representative cases? Something available online would be best. Thanks in advance.

Filed under General by Mark Liberman @ 12:31 pm

Still more anglicizing

Indirectly following up on Bob’s two posts on anglicizing Russian hockey players’ names, Barbara Partee has just posted to Language Log (by way of Chris Potts) on stress for Russian tennis players’ names.

Filed under General by Eric Baković @ 10:33 am

September 20, 2004

More upcoming conferences

Marc van Oostendorp writes to directly and indirectly remind me of two other upcoming conferences of special interest to phonologists.

Sorry ’bout that, Old World folks. Slipped my mind.

Update:

The website for the Between Stress and Tone seems to be working now.

  • Title and link: Between Stress and Tone
    Submission deadline: Nov. 1, 2004
    Location and dates: Leiden, June 16-18, 2005

Filed under Conferences/Workshops by Eric Baković @ 11:04 pm

September 19, 2004

Hypercorrection in Brazilian English?

While we seem to be on the topic of the L2 English phonology of our south american kin, I wanted to bring up an observation and see if others had noticed anything similar elsewhere: some speakers of Brazilian Portuguese, who epenthesize [i] in consonant clusters (e.g. ‘gifit’ for ‘gift’) appear to also *drop* [i] word-finally (e.g. ‘unhealth’ for ‘unhealthy’ and ‘Chomsk’ for Chomsky). A possible explanation seemed to be in terms of a hypercorrective deletion rule.

Filed under General by Andrew Nevins @ 5:51 pm

September 18, 2004

Upcoming conferences

Apart from the usual general linguistics conferences we’ve all probably seen/heard calls for by now (NELS, WECOL, BLS, etc.), there are a number of interesting upcoming conferences of special interest to phonologists.

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Filed under Conferences/Workshops by Eric Baković @ 1:22 pm

September 16, 2004

Flapping and spirantization

I saw this sign outside a storefront in San Francisco’s recently-renovated Ferry Building this past Sunday, and it got me to thinking about the English-as-a-second-language speech of my (Bolivian) Spanish-speaking family, some of whom I was visiting at the time.

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Filed under General by Eric Baković @ 2:02 pm
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