Metrical, Phonotactic, and Phonetic Evidence Against Asymmetrical Iambs

Asymmetries in metrical phonology are derived from an inherent imbalance in the foot typology caused by asymmetrical iambs (LH). Principles such as the iambic rhythmic harmony scale (Prince 1990) and the Iambic/Trochaic Law (ITL; Bolton 1894, Woodrow 1951, Hayes 1985, 1995) situate asymmetrical iamb...

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Main Author: Driscoll, Trevor
Other Authors: Golston, Chris, Linguistics, Agbayani, Brian, Fulop, Sean
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10211.3/210973
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spelling ftcalifstateuniv:oai:dspace.calstate.edu:10211.3/210973 2023-05-15T13:21:21+02:00 Metrical, Phonotactic, and Phonetic Evidence Against Asymmetrical Iambs Driscoll, Trevor Golston, Chris Linguistics Agbayani, Brian Fulop, Sean 2019 http://hdl.handle.net/10211.3/210973 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/10211.3/210973 2019 ftcalifstateuniv 2022-04-13T11:43:49Z Asymmetries in metrical phonology are derived from an inherent imbalance in the foot typology caused by asymmetrical iambs (LH). Principles such as the iambic rhythmic harmony scale (Prince 1990) and the Iambic/Trochaic Law (ITL; Bolton 1894, Woodrow 1951, Hayes 1985, 1995) situate asymmetrical iambs as the canonical foot shape for iambic languages. Conversely, Kager (1993) allows asymmetrical iambs as a consequence of iambic lengthening but argues against them as an intrinsically valuable underlying structure. In this thesis, I argue more strongly that asymmetrical iambs are not grammatical at any level of representation. In Optimality Theory (Prince & Smolensky 1993/2004) Kager???s distinction between parsing and surface feet is irrelevant as there are no intermediate representations. Asymmetrical iambs are also incompatible with data from Norton Sound Yupik, Chugach Alutiiq, and Hidatsa. Stress assignment and pre-long strengthening in Norton Sound Yupik convert underlying LH to HH. In Chugach Alutiiq foot-initial fortition appears between L and H syllables and gradient foot-medial voicing properties in Hidatsa are absent between L and H. Each of these languages provide clear evidence that (LH) is not a viable metrical constituent. Additionally, I demonstrate that iambic lengthening can be motivated by factors other than asymmetrical iambs and that such an analysis provides a more nuanced explanation of the typological facts surrounding metrical asymmetries. Arts and Humanities Other/Unknown Material alutiiq Yupik California State University (CSU): DSpace Bolton ENVELOPE(-62.967,-62.967,-65.017,-65.017) Hayes ENVELOPE(-64.167,-64.167,-66.833,-66.833) Norton Sound ENVELOPE(69.507,69.507,-49.202,-49.202)
institution Open Polar
collection California State University (CSU): DSpace
op_collection_id ftcalifstateuniv
language English
description Asymmetries in metrical phonology are derived from an inherent imbalance in the foot typology caused by asymmetrical iambs (LH). Principles such as the iambic rhythmic harmony scale (Prince 1990) and the Iambic/Trochaic Law (ITL; Bolton 1894, Woodrow 1951, Hayes 1985, 1995) situate asymmetrical iambs as the canonical foot shape for iambic languages. Conversely, Kager (1993) allows asymmetrical iambs as a consequence of iambic lengthening but argues against them as an intrinsically valuable underlying structure. In this thesis, I argue more strongly that asymmetrical iambs are not grammatical at any level of representation. In Optimality Theory (Prince & Smolensky 1993/2004) Kager???s distinction between parsing and surface feet is irrelevant as there are no intermediate representations. Asymmetrical iambs are also incompatible with data from Norton Sound Yupik, Chugach Alutiiq, and Hidatsa. Stress assignment and pre-long strengthening in Norton Sound Yupik convert underlying LH to HH. In Chugach Alutiiq foot-initial fortition appears between L and H syllables and gradient foot-medial voicing properties in Hidatsa are absent between L and H. Each of these languages provide clear evidence that (LH) is not a viable metrical constituent. Additionally, I demonstrate that iambic lengthening can be motivated by factors other than asymmetrical iambs and that such an analysis provides a more nuanced explanation of the typological facts surrounding metrical asymmetries. Arts and Humanities
author2 Golston, Chris
Linguistics
Agbayani, Brian
Fulop, Sean
author Driscoll, Trevor
spellingShingle Driscoll, Trevor
Metrical, Phonotactic, and Phonetic Evidence Against Asymmetrical Iambs
author_facet Driscoll, Trevor
author_sort Driscoll, Trevor
title Metrical, Phonotactic, and Phonetic Evidence Against Asymmetrical Iambs
title_short Metrical, Phonotactic, and Phonetic Evidence Against Asymmetrical Iambs
title_full Metrical, Phonotactic, and Phonetic Evidence Against Asymmetrical Iambs
title_fullStr Metrical, Phonotactic, and Phonetic Evidence Against Asymmetrical Iambs
title_full_unstemmed Metrical, Phonotactic, and Phonetic Evidence Against Asymmetrical Iambs
title_sort metrical, phonotactic, and phonetic evidence against asymmetrical iambs
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10211.3/210973
long_lat ENVELOPE(-62.967,-62.967,-65.017,-65.017)
ENVELOPE(-64.167,-64.167,-66.833,-66.833)
ENVELOPE(69.507,69.507,-49.202,-49.202)
geographic Bolton
Hayes
Norton Sound
geographic_facet Bolton
Hayes
Norton Sound
genre alutiiq
Yupik
genre_facet alutiiq
Yupik
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10211.3/210973
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