2012
DOI: 10.1007/s11049-012-9170-8
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Morphological alternations at the intonational phrase edge

Abstract: This article develops an analysis of a pair of morphological alternations in K'ichee' (Mayan) that are conditioned at the right edge of intonational phrase boundaries. I propose a syntax-prosody mapping algorithm that derives intonational phrase boundaries from the surface syntax, and then argue that each alternation can be understood in terms of output optimization (Mascaró 2007;Mester 1994). The important fact is that K'ichee' requires a prominence peak rightmost in the intonational phrase, and so the morpho… Show more

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Cited by 31 publications
(34 citation statements)
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References 31 publications
(44 reference statements)
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“…A notable exception is Anderbois (), who argues that various phonological processes affecting the distribution of laryngeals in Yucatec are conditioned by word and phrase boundaries. Similar facts are given for K'iche' in Henderson (). Bennett () reports longer periods of aspiration for phrase‐final aspirated stops in Tz'utujil (section 3.4.1).…”
Section: Phrasal Prosody: the Word And Abovesupporting
confidence: 75%
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“…A notable exception is Anderbois (), who argues that various phonological processes affecting the distribution of laryngeals in Yucatec are conditioned by word and phrase boundaries. Similar facts are given for K'iche' in Henderson (). Bennett () reports longer periods of aspiration for phrase‐final aspirated stops in Tz'utujil (section 3.4.1).…”
Section: Phrasal Prosody: the Word And Abovesupporting
confidence: 75%
“…Nielsen ). These patterns thus support a model of grammatical computation in which morphological insertion has access to pre‐constructed prosodic boundaries; see Hayes (), Keating & Shattuck‐Hufnagel (), Ackema & Neeleman (), Henderson () for more discussion.…”
Section: Phrasal Prosody: the Word And Abovesupporting
confidence: 58%
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“…Larsen (1988) and Nielsen (2005) described K'iche' stress as word-final. However, Henderson (2012) claimed that K'iche' stress is word-final, unless the final syllable is light non-root material, in which case the final root syllable is stressed.…”
Section: K'iche'mentioning
confidence: 99%