Yaka Nasal Harmony: Spreading or Segmental Correspondence?
نویسندگان
چکیده
I argue that this kind of nasal harmony comes about through a correspondence relation between Cs in a word rather than resulting from feature spreading. This proposal will be important in explaining the characteristics in (1) and also the neutrality of ‘prenasal’ NC complexes in the language. From a broader perspective, this approach has the potential to extend to other segmental harmonies that display similar characterizing properties (Walker 1999, to appear, Rose & Walker in prep.). The analysis is couched in Optimality Theory (OT; Prince & Smolensky 1993). The paper is organized as follows. In §1 I present data illustrating Yaka nasal harmony. In §2 I bring evidence to bear on the question whether the pattern arises through correspondence or spreading, and I diagnose it as the former. §3 lays out a theoretical overview of the correspondence approach to long-distance harmony. In §4 I develop the details of the Yaka analysis, and §5 gives the conclusion.
منابع مشابه
Reinterpreting Transparency in Nasal Harmony*
1 . Introduction In this paper I examine crosslinguistic variation in nasal harmony. Three kinds of segment behavior are observed: target segments become nasalized in nasal harmony (/na/ → [na)]), blocking or opaque segments remain oral and block nasal spreading (/nata/ → [na) ta]), and transparent segments remain oral and do not block nasal spreading (/nata/ → [na) ta) ]). The membership of th...
متن کاملConsonant Harmony via Correspondence: Evidence from Chumash
Hansson (2001), Rose & Walker (2004), and Walker (2000a, 2000b) have recently proposed that long-distance consonant assimilation is accomplished via segmental correspondence rather than autosegmental linking. The phonology of the feature [anterior] in Chumash supports this idea: linking of the feature [anterior] is forbidden across morpheme boundaries, but long-distance [anterior] harmony is al...
متن کاملConsonant-Tone Interaction as Agreement by Correspondence
This paper addresses the on-going debate over the distinction between Agreement by Correspondence (Hansson 2001; Rose and Walker 2004; a.o.) and the previously dominant theory of autosegmental feature spreading, focusing on a key conceptual difference between the two theories: the role of similarity as the basis of harmony patterns. It is argued that Agreement by Correspondence’s unique ability...
متن کاملPositional Prominence and the “Prosodic Trough” in Yaka
The issue of Bantu vowel height harmony is one that most serious theories of phonology have addressed at one time or another. As is quite well-known, the majority of an estimated 500± Bantu languages exhibit some variant of a progressive harmony process by which vowels lower when preceded by an appropriate (lower) trigger. In this paper I have three goals. First, I present a comprehensive treat...
متن کاملUnstable surface correspondence as the source of local conspiracies
In this paper, we address parallelisms between local and long-distance effects in segmental phonology, focusing on the similarity conditions that trigger them. We take the view that both local and long-distance harmony and disharmony are consequences of segmental correspondence—namely, unstable surface correspondence—as modeled in Agreement by Correspondence theory (henceforth ABC; e.g., Walker...
متن کامل