The phonology and morphology of Halfway River Beaver.

This dissertation is an examination of word formation and the phonological properties of the verb in Halfway River Beaver (HRB), a Northern Athapaskan language of British Columbia. Due to various types of discontinuous dependencies between verb prefixes, I adopt the traditional analysis of the Athap...

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Main Author: Randoja, Tiina Kathryn.
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: University of Ottawa (Canada) 1990
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10393/5749
https://doi.org/10.20381/ruor-14515
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spelling ftunivottawa:oai:ruor.uottawa.ca:10393/5749 2023-05-15T17:41:53+02:00 The phonology and morphology of Halfway River Beaver. Randoja, Tiina Kathryn. 1990 306 p. application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10393/5749 https://doi.org/10.20381/ruor-14515 unknown University of Ottawa (Canada) Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 52-11, Section: A, page: 3910. 9780315605459 http://hdl.handle.net/10393/5749 http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-14515 Language Linguistics Thesis 1990 ftunivottawa https://doi.org/10.20381/ruor-14515 2021-01-04T17:04:11Z This dissertation is an examination of word formation and the phonological properties of the verb in Halfway River Beaver (HRB), a Northern Athapaskan language of British Columbia. Due to various types of discontinuous dependencies between verb prefixes, I adopt the traditional analysis of the Athapaskan verb into verb theme, verb base, and verb form (Sapir and Hoijer 1967, among others) to determine the sequence of affixation in the morphology. The resulting representation structures prefixes in a way which is vastly different from their surface ordering; the differences seem bizarre, as they are not encountered in non-Athapaskan languages. I propose a mapping protocol to arrive at the correct surface sequence, whereby affixes are inserted into a thematic template. It is argued that this template is a motivated structure, because it represents both the theme, which is the lexical entry of the verb, and the division of the verb into phonological rule domains. Two aspects of verb prefix phonology are considered. First, I account for the phonological similarity of two nonadjacent rule domains of the surface verb, the disjunct and the stem domains, in terms of the mapping protocol developed earlier. Secondly, I investigate the very complex and seemingly arbitrary phonological alternations undergone by prefixes in the conjunct domain, which intervenes between the disjunct and stem domains. These alternations are shown to be systematic in an analysis which adopts the notions of syllable template mapping and extraprosodicity. Conjunct prefix vowels are considered to be mostly epenthetic and vowel quality is seen to be largely predictable. The morphological and phonological analyses are preceded by a chapter which describes the properties of HRB verb prefixes in detail. Thesis Northern Athapaskan uO Research (University of Ottawa - uOttawa) Halfway River ENVELOPE(-121.436,-121.436,56.217,56.217)
institution Open Polar
collection uO Research (University of Ottawa - uOttawa)
op_collection_id ftunivottawa
language unknown
topic Language
Linguistics
spellingShingle Language
Linguistics
Randoja, Tiina Kathryn.
The phonology and morphology of Halfway River Beaver.
topic_facet Language
Linguistics
description This dissertation is an examination of word formation and the phonological properties of the verb in Halfway River Beaver (HRB), a Northern Athapaskan language of British Columbia. Due to various types of discontinuous dependencies between verb prefixes, I adopt the traditional analysis of the Athapaskan verb into verb theme, verb base, and verb form (Sapir and Hoijer 1967, among others) to determine the sequence of affixation in the morphology. The resulting representation structures prefixes in a way which is vastly different from their surface ordering; the differences seem bizarre, as they are not encountered in non-Athapaskan languages. I propose a mapping protocol to arrive at the correct surface sequence, whereby affixes are inserted into a thematic template. It is argued that this template is a motivated structure, because it represents both the theme, which is the lexical entry of the verb, and the division of the verb into phonological rule domains. Two aspects of verb prefix phonology are considered. First, I account for the phonological similarity of two nonadjacent rule domains of the surface verb, the disjunct and the stem domains, in terms of the mapping protocol developed earlier. Secondly, I investigate the very complex and seemingly arbitrary phonological alternations undergone by prefixes in the conjunct domain, which intervenes between the disjunct and stem domains. These alternations are shown to be systematic in an analysis which adopts the notions of syllable template mapping and extraprosodicity. Conjunct prefix vowels are considered to be mostly epenthetic and vowel quality is seen to be largely predictable. The morphological and phonological analyses are preceded by a chapter which describes the properties of HRB verb prefixes in detail.
format Thesis
author Randoja, Tiina Kathryn.
author_facet Randoja, Tiina Kathryn.
author_sort Randoja, Tiina Kathryn.
title The phonology and morphology of Halfway River Beaver.
title_short The phonology and morphology of Halfway River Beaver.
title_full The phonology and morphology of Halfway River Beaver.
title_fullStr The phonology and morphology of Halfway River Beaver.
title_full_unstemmed The phonology and morphology of Halfway River Beaver.
title_sort phonology and morphology of halfway river beaver.
publisher University of Ottawa (Canada)
publishDate 1990
url http://hdl.handle.net/10393/5749
https://doi.org/10.20381/ruor-14515
long_lat ENVELOPE(-121.436,-121.436,56.217,56.217)
geographic Halfway River
geographic_facet Halfway River
genre Northern Athapaskan
genre_facet Northern Athapaskan
op_relation Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 52-11, Section: A, page: 3910.
9780315605459
http://hdl.handle.net/10393/5749
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-14515
op_doi https://doi.org/10.20381/ruor-14515
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