[Author Login]
[Home]
ROA:417
Title:Regional variation at edges: glottal stop epenthesis and dissimilation in Standard and Southern varieties of German
Authors:Birgit Alber
Comment:33 pages. To appear in the 'Zeitschrift für Sprachwissenschaft' (2001)
Length:33
Abstract:Regional variation at edges: glottal stop epenthesis and dissimilation

in Standard and Southern varieties of German



Birgit Alber

University of Marburg





Edges of prosodic and morphological constituents often behave differently

from non-edge positions, but it is not always clear how such edge-effects

are brought about. This paper is a case study of an edge-phenomenon in

different varieties of German. Thus, glottal stop epenthesis is limited

to edges of morphemes in Southern German, but not in Standard German and

insertion of a dissimilatory feature in /sC/ clusters is limited to root

edges in Standard German, though not in some Southern varieties. I argue

that an analysis in terms of optimality theory (Prince/Smolensky 1993)

based on ranked, violable constraints can best account for these facts:

high ranking of a constraint banning domain-internal epenthesis

(O-CONTIGUITY) with respect to insertion triggering constraints can

explain the restriction to edges, low ranking of the same constraint

will result in application of epenthesis or dissimilation also inside

the specified domain. Moreover, the implementation of the analysis in

terms of optimality theory can shed light on this typical pattern of

variation among closely related varieties of the same language: the

difference between the variety where a process takes place everywhere

and the variety where the same process applies only at edges will be

analyzed as a minimal difference in faithfulness of the two grammars

involved.
Type:Paper/tech report
Area/Keywords:
Article:Version 1