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PROSODIC CONSTRAINTS IN MORPHOSYNTACTIC DOMAINS *
"... Clitics are a famous topic challenging the modularity in grammatical organisation inasmuch as they cannot be adequately interpreted as exclusively belonging to one particular level of linguistic description. Various phenomena related to cliticisation, which are observable across languages, suggest t ..."
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that any description of clitic placement should take into consideration the interaction between (prosodic) phonology and (morpho)syntax. According to Nespor and Vogel 1986, whether or not an element is a clitic should be decided on the basis of non-phonological criteria, but a specific place must
Prosodic Constraints on Dynamic Grammatical Analysis
, 1991
"... iew Press: Boulder, Colorado. Oehrle, R.T. (1988a). Multidimensional compositional functions as a basis for grammatical analysis. in R.T. Oehrle, E. Bach, and D. Wheeler, eds., Categorial Grammars and Natural Language Structures. 349-389. Reidel. Dordrecht. Oehrle, R.T. in press. Dynamic categoria ..."
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Cited by 12 (0 self)
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iew Press: Boulder, Colorado. Oehrle, R.T. (1988a). Multidimensional compositional functions as a basis for grammatical analysis. in R.T. Oehrle, E. Bach, and D. Wheeler, eds., Categorial Grammars and Natural Language Structures. 349-389. Reidel. Dordrecht. Oehrle, R.T. in press. Dynamic categorial grammar. in R. Levine, ed., Formal Grammar: Theory and Implementation. Oxford University Press. Oxford. Partee, B. & M. Rooth. (1983). Generalized conjunction and type ambiguity. in R. Buerle et al., eds, Meaning, Use and I'nterretation of Language. Walter de Gruyter. Berlin. Pierrehumbert, J. (1980). The Phonology and Phonetics of English Intonation. Ph.D. dis- sertation. MIT. Pierrehumbert, J. & J. 11irschberg. (1990). 'The Meaning of Intonational Contours in the Interpretation of Discourse'. in P.R. Cohen, J. Morgan, and M.E. Pollack, eds., Intentions in Communication, pp. 271-311. MIT Press: Cambridge, Mass. Polanyi, L. (1986). The Linguistics Discourse Model: Towards a Formal Theo
Pitch Prediction for Mandarin TTS with Mutual Prosodic Constraint
"... Abstract. Most of current pitch prediction methods for mandarin TTS try to get pitch contours from the contextual information with a group of weights assigning. Without a good method in prosody concatenation constraint, the predicted pitch contours are not always stable because of the incomplete acc ..."
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accordance between prosody information and text information. The paper presents a new mandarin pitch prediction method with mutual prosodic constraint between syllables. The idea of this mutual constraint is first inspired by lots of observations on corpus, but then it has been strictly proved
Prosodic Morphology: constraint interaction and satisfaction
, 1993
"... Permission is hereby granted by the authors to reproduce this document, in whole or in part, for personal use, for instruction, or for any other non-commercial purpose. Table of Contents Acknowledgments......................................................... ..."
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Cited by 424 (30 self)
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Permission is hereby granted by the authors to reproduce this document, in whole or in part, for personal use, for instruction, or for any other non-commercial purpose. Table of Contents Acknowledgments.........................................................
Prosodic Constraints and the Learner's Environment: a Corpus Study
- In Proceedings of the 24th Annual Boston University Conference on Language Development
, 2000
"... Spanish first language learners contrast with English learners in producing some untruncated trisyllabic words, containing unfooted syllables, from a very early age. Conversely, it appears that English learners produce coda consonants earlier than their Spanish counterparts. It has been suggested th ..."
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Cited by 23 (8 self)
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that these (and other) differences are due to the frequency of particular phonological word shapes in the learner's environment. This paper looks at Spanish and English adult speech in the CHILDES database. The authors assign a prosodic structure, including syllable structure and location of primary stress
Prosodic Constraints in the Acquisition of English Primary Stress by French Canadian L2 Learners
"... The acquisition of second language (L2) prosodic representations has been investigated in several ..."
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The acquisition of second language (L2) prosodic representations has been investigated in several
Markedness and the development of prosodic structure
- In Proceedings of NELS
, 1995
"... It has long been noted that children’s early words are truncated in form, and that those forms show a certain degree of variability in shape. In this paper I argue that children’s early word productions can best be understood in terms of output constraints on surface form. First, I show that childre ..."
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Cited by 88 (15 self)
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It has long been noted that children’s early words are truncated in form, and that those forms show a certain degree of variability in shape. In this paper I argue that children’s early word productions can best be understood in terms of output constraints on surface form. First, I show
Prosodic Categorisation
, 1997
"... The structural elements of the prosodic hierarchy and the ways in which phonological generalisations make reference to them are investigated. Assuming, as argued, that these elements constitute a universal set of primitives, the different types (categories) of such elements, especially the syllable, ..."
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Cited by 11 (4 self)
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The structural elements of the prosodic hierarchy and the ways in which phonological generalisations make reference to them are investigated. Assuming, as argued, that these elements constitute a universal set of primitives, the different types (categories) of such elements, especially the syllable
Constraint universality and prosodic phrasing in Māori
- In Papers in Optimality II, eds. Angela Carpenter, Andries Coetzee and Paul de Lacy
, 2003
"... This paper explores the notion that all constraints are present in all grammars (‘Universality’). For any pair of constraints, Universality is shown to produce four types of system, differing in terms of the constraints ’ activity (i.e. visible effect). Conditions on the typological predictions are ..."
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Cited by 1 (0 self)
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This paper explores the notion that all constraints are present in all grammars (‘Universality’). For any pair of constraints, Universality is shown to produce four types of system, differing in terms of the constraints ’ activity (i.e. visible effect). Conditions on the typological predictions
Results 1 - 10
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