ROA: | 689 |
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Title: | Coronals and compounding in Irish |
Authors: | Antony D. Green |
Comment: | |
Length: | 27 |
Abstract: | Irish is characterized by a process of lenition, by which(among other changes) the coronals t, d, s become h, (gamma),h under certain morphosyntactically determined circumstances. Lenition of coronals is blocked (i.e. t, d, s remain unchanged)after other coronal consonants in certain domains, a phenomenon known as coronal fusion (CF). In a subset of CF domains s changes to t rather than remaining s, a phenomenon known as s-fortition. In this paper, it will be shown that the domain of CF and s-fortition is the (recursive) prosodic word, as these two processes are found in right-headed as well as left-headed compounds, but not in other (noncompound) left-headed complex NPs. An optimality-theoretic analysis reveals that CF and s-fortition are motivated by the same constraint ranking: the phonological requirement that coronal consonants be followed by other coronal consonants is more important than the selection of the morphologically correct mutation grade of a word. |
Type: | Paper/tech report |
Area/Keywords: | Morphology,Phonology |
Article: | Version 1 |