Papers of the ... Algonquian Conference, Volume 37Carleton University, 2005 - Algonquian Indians |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 50
Page 269
... phonological patterns appear to be controlled by a specific morpheme or groups of morphemes . However , in conventional phonological thinking , the role of word - internal syntax in the exercise of such control is often underestimated ...
... phonological patterns appear to be controlled by a specific morpheme or groups of morphemes . However , in conventional phonological thinking , the role of word - internal syntax in the exercise of such control is often underestimated ...
Page 285
... phonological consequences , since no new lexical material is inserted . At this stage of the derivation , phonology gen- erates the output in ( 30a ) . Lexical insertion at the CP phase adds the past tense marker / gi : - / ( 30b ) and ...
... phonological consequences , since no new lexical material is inserted . At this stage of the derivation , phonology gen- erates the output in ( 30a ) . Lexical insertion at the CP phase adds the past tense marker / gi : - / ( 30b ) and ...
Page 290
... phonological analysis should always explicitly acknowledge the word - internal syntax . The second message is that conditions on phonological well - formedness ( i.e. , constraints ) follow from the way phonological substance is ...
... phonological analysis should always explicitly acknowledge the word - internal syntax . The second message is that conditions on phonological well - formedness ( i.e. , constraints ) follow from the way phonological substance is ...
Contents
MariePierre Bousquet | 1 |
Julie Brittain Carrie Dyck | 19 |
Richard Burleson | 37 |
Copyright | |
19 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
abénakis Algonquian American amplitude analysis animate appear become boundaries clause combinations conjunct considered context contrast culture discourse discussion East Cree elicitation endings English evidence example experience fall final Flannery forms given gives hunting important INDEP independent Indian indicate inflection initial internal interpretation James Bay John language Linguistics living marked means morpheme nâpêw narrative Naskapi Native negative notes noun obviation occur Ojibwe patterns phase phonological pitch Plains Cree plural position possible practice prefix present Press Preston preverb prominence pronouns prosodic Québec question recorded refer Regina residential school result root social Society speakers speech spirit stem stories stress structure suffix syllable task texts things tion told toponymes traditional University verb vowel Winnipeg Wolfart woman women