[Author Login]
[Home]
ROA:542
Title:The formal expression of markedness [Dissertation]
Authors:Paul de Lacy
Comment:
Length:560
Abstract:This dissertation presents a formal theory of markedness, set within
Optimality Theory. Two of the leading ideas are (a) hierarchical
markedness relations may be ignored, but never reversed and (b)
the more marked an element is, the greater the pressure to preserve
it.

Examples of (a) are found in sonority-driven stress systems. In
Gujarati, low vowels attract stress away from mid vowels, while
Nganasan's stress system makes no distinction between the two
categories. So, while stressed mid vowels are more marked than
stressed low vowels (as shown by Gujarati), that distinction can be
conflated (as in Nganasan). However, in no language is the markedness
relation reversed: stressed mid vowels are never preferred over
stressed low vowels.

An example of (b) is found in Yamphu. /t/ is eliminated through a
process of debuccalization. In contrast, the more marked segments /k/
and /p/ remain intact; these segments avoid the debuccalization process
because they are highly marked and thereby excite greater preservation.
Ideas (a) and (b) are formally expressed as a set of constraint-
formation conditions. For constraints on output structures ('markedness'
constraints), if a constraint assigns a violation to an element p in
scale S, then the constraint also assigns a violation to every element
that is more marked than p in S. An analogous proposal applies to
faithfulness (i.e. preservation) constraints: if a faithfulness
constraint bans an unfaithful mapping from element p in scale S, then
the constraint also bans unfaithful mappings from all elements that
are more marked than p in S. The result is that - regardless of the
constraints' ranking - more marked elements are both subject to more
stringent output conditions and preserved more faithfully than
lesser-marked ones. The constraints are also shown to allow distinctions
between scale categories to be collapsed.

A wide range of phonological phenomena provide evidence for the
theoretical proposals, including analyses and typologies of sonority-
driven stress (Nganasan, Gujarati, Kiriwina, and Harar Oromo),
tone-driven stress, vowel and consonant epenthesis, vowel reduction
(Dutch), coda neutralization (Malay and Yamphu), Place assimilation
(Catalan, Ponapean, Korean, Swedish, and Sri Lankan Portuguese Creole),
and coalescence (Attic Greek and Pali).

OUTLINE
=======
CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION
CHAPTER 2: THEORY
CHAPTER 3: MARKEDNESS AND CONFLATION
[Sonority-driven stress]
CHAPTER 4: NON-DTEs
[Sonority-driven stress, vowel reduction, vowel epenthesis]
CHAPTER 5: PRELIMINARIES TO FAITHFULNESS
CHAPTER 6: FAITHFULNESS TO THE MARKED I: NEUTRALIZATION
CHAPTER 7: FAITHFULNESS TO THE MARKED II: AVOIDING HETERORGANIC CLUSTERS
[Place and voice Assimilation, deletion]
CHAPTER 8: FAITHFULNESS AND CONFLATION: COALESCENCE
CHAPTER 9: SUMMARY
APPENDICES
REFERENCES
Type:Dissertation
Area/Keywords:Phonology,Formal Analysis
Article:Part 1
Part 2