A Gradient Harmonic Grammar Account of Nasals in Extended Phonological Words
Abstract
The article aims at contributing to the long-standing research on the prosodic organization of linguistic elements and the criteria used for identifying prosodic structures. Our focus is on final coronal nasals in function words in Greek and the variability in their patterns of realization before lexical words. Certain nasals coalesce before stops and delete before fricatives, whereas others do not. We propose that this split in the behavior of nasals does not pertain to item-specific prosody because the relevant strings are uniformly prosodified into an extended phonological word (Itô & Mester 2007, 2009). It rather stems from the contrastive activity level of nasals in underlying forms in the spirit of Smolensky & Goldrick’s (2016) Gradient Symbolic Representations; nasals with lower activity coalesce and delete in the respective phonological environments, whereas those with higher activity do not. We show that the proposed analysis captures certain gradient effects that alternative analyses cannot account for.
Keywords
Gradient Symbolic Representations, Greek, nasal coalescence, Gradient Harmonic Grammar, extended / maximal phonological word, post-nasal voicingReferences
Apostolopoulou, Irini. 2018. Phonological Representation of Glide in Standard Greek: A Gradient Harmonic Grammar Approach. MA dissertation, A.U.Th.
Arvaniti, Amalia & Joseph, Brian D. 1999. Variation in voiced stop prenasalization in Greek. Ohio State University Working Papers in Linguistics 52: 203-233.
Baltazani, Mary & Topintzi, Nina. 2012. On some phonetic and phonological properties of the Greek glide. In Gavriilidou, Zoe, Efthymiou, Angeliki, Thomadaki, Evangelia & Kambakis–Vougiouklis, Penelope (eds.). Proceedings of the 10th ICGL, 153-166. Komotini: Democritus University of Thrace.
Baltazani, Mary, Kainada, Evia, Revithiadou, Anthi & Topintzi, Nina. 2016. Vocoid-driven processes: Palatalization and glide hardening in Greek and its dialects. Glossa: A Journal of General Linguistics 1(1): 23. http://doi.org/10.5334/gjgl.108
Bennett, Ryan & Elfner, Emily. 2019. The Syntax–Prosody Interface. Annual Review of Linguistics 5(1). Annual Reviews: 151-171. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-linguistics-011718-012503
Bonet, Eulàlia, Cheng, Lisa Lai-Shen, Downing, Laura J. & Mascaró, Joan. 2019. (In)direct reference in the phonology-syntax interface under Phase Theory: A response to “Modular PIC” (D’Alessandro and Scheer 2015). Linguistic Inquiry 50(4): 751-777. https://doi.org/10.1162/ling_a_00324
Booij, Geert. 1995. The Phonology of Dutch. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Booij, Geert. 1996. Cliticization as prosodic integration: The case of Dutch. The Linguistic Review 13: 219-242. https://doi.org/10.1515/tlir.1996.13.3-4.219
Chomsky, Noam. 2001. Derivation by phase. In Michael Kenstowicz (ed.). Ken Hale. A Life in Language, 1-52. Cambridge, MA: Cambridge University Press.
Dobashi, Yoshihito. 2003. Phonological Phrasing and Syntactic Derivation. PhD dissertation., Linguistics, Cornell University.
Embick, David. 2010. Localism versus Globalism in Morphology and Phonology. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Faust, Noam & Smolensky, Paul. 2017. Activity as an Αlternative to Αutosegmental Αssociation. Unpublished manuscript, Université Paris 8 & John Hopkins University.
Gouskova, Maria & Linzen, Tal. 2015. Morphological conditioning of phonological regularization. The Linguistic Review 32(3): 427-473. https://doi.org/10.1515/tlr-2014-0027
Halle, Morris & Marantz, Alec. 1993. Distributed Morphology and the pieces of inflection. In Hale, Kenneth & Keyser, Samuel Jay (eds.). The View from Building 20: Essays in Linguistics in Honor of Sylvain Bromberger, 111-176. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Hayes, Bruce. 1984. The phonology of rhythm in English. Linguistic Inquiry 15(1): 33-74.
Hayes, Bruce. 1989. The prosodic hierarchy in meter. In Kiparsky, Paul & Youmans, Gilbert (eds.). Rhythm and Meter, 201-260. Orlando, FL: Academic Press.
Heck, Fabian, Müller, Gereon & Trommer, Jochen. 2009. A phase-based approach to Scandinavian definiteness marking. STUF 62(4): 258-268. https://doi.org/10.1524/stuf.2009.0020
Holton, David, Mackridge, Peter, Philippaki–Warburton, Irene & Spyropoulos, Vassilios. 2012. Greek: A Comprehensive Grammar. 2nd ed. London: Routledge.
Hsu, Brian. 2019. Exceptional prosodification effects revisited in Gradient Harmonic Grammar. Phonology 36(2): 225-263. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0952675719000125
Inkelas, Sharon. 1990. Prosodic Constituency in the Lexicon. Outstanding Dissertations in Linguistics Series. New York: Garland Publishing Co.
Ishihara, Shinichiro. 2007. Major phrase, focus intonation, multiple Spell-Out. The Linguistic Review 24(2-3): 137-167. https://doi.org/10.1515/TLR.2007.006
Itô, Junko & Mester, Armin. 1994. Reflections on CodaCond and Alignment. In Jason Merchant, Padgett, Jaye & Walker, Rachel (eds.). Phonology at Santa Cruz [PASC] 3: 27-46. Linguistics Research Center, University of California, Santa Cruz.
Itô, Junko & Mester, Armin. 2007. Prosodic adjunction in Japanese compounds. MIT Working Papers in Linguistics 55: Formal Approaches to Japanese Linguistics 4: 97-111.
Itô, Junko & Mester, Armin. 2009. The extended prosodic word. In Kabak, Barış & Grijzenhout, Janet (eds.). Phonological Domains: Universals and Derivations, 135-194. The Hague: Mouton de Gruyter. https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110217100.2.135
Kabak, Bariş & Revithiadou, Anthi. 2009. An interface approach to prosodic word recursion. In Kabak, Barış & Grijzenhout, Janet (eds.). Phonological Domains: Universals and Derivations, 105-132. The Hague: Mouton de Gruyter. https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110217100.2.105
Kainada, Evia. 2009. The Phonetic and Phonological Nature of Prosodic Boundaries: Evidence from Modern Greek. PhD dissertation, University of Edinburgh.
Kong, Eun Jong, Beckman, Mary E. & Edwards, Jan. 2007. Fine-grained phonetics and acquisition of Greek voiced stops. In Proceedings of the 16th ICPhS, 865-868.
Legendre, Géraldine, Miyata, Yoshiro & Smolensky, Paul. 1990. Harmonic Grammar – A formal multi-level connectionist theory of linguistic well-formedness: Theoretical foundations. In Proceedings of the 12th Conference of the Cognitive Science Society, 388-395. Cambridge, MA: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
Marantz, Alec. 2007. Phases and words. In Choe, Sook Hee (ed.). Phases in the Theory of Grammar, 191-222. Seoul: Dong-In Publishing.
McCarthy, John J. & Prince, Alan S. 1993. Generalized Alignment. In Booij, Geert & van Marle, Jaap (eds.). Yearbook of Morphology 1993, 79-153. Dordrecht: Kluwer.
McCarthy, John J. & Prince, Alan S. 1995. Faithfulness and reduplicative identity. In Beckman, Jill, Walsh Dickey, Laura & Urbanczyk, Suzanne (eds.). University of Massachusetts Occasional Papers in Linguistics 18: Papers in Optimality Theory, 249-384. GLSA, University of Massachusetts at Amherst.
Nespor, Marina & Vogel, Irene. 1986. Prosodic Phonology. Dordrecht: Foris Publications.
Pater, Joe. 1996. *NC. Proceedings of the North East Linguistics Society 26: 227-239.
Pater, Joe. 2009. Weighted constraints in generative linguistics. Cognitive Science 33: 999-1035. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1551-6709.2009.01047.x
Peperkamp, Sharon. 1997. Prosodic Words. PhD dissertation, HIL Dissertation Series 34 (HIL/University of Amsterdam). The Hague: Holland Academic Graphics.
Philippaki–Warburton, Irene. 1998. Functional categories and Modern Greek syntax. The Linguistic Review 15: 158-186. https://doi.org/10.1515/tlir.1998.15.2-3.159
Philippaki–Warburton, Irene & Spyropoulos, Vassilios. 1999. On the boundaries of inflection and syntax: Greek pronominal clitics and particles. In Booij, Geert & van Marle, Jaap (eds.). The Yearbook of Morphology 1998, 45-72. Dordrecht: Kluwer.
Prince, Alan & Smolensky, Paul. 1993. Optimality Theory: Constraint Interaction in Generative Grammar. Technical Report CU‐CS‐696–95. RuCCS‐TR‐2.
Revithiadou, Anthi & Spyropoulos, Vassilios. 2008. Greek object clitic pronouns: A typological survey of their grammatical properties. STUF 61: 39-53. https://doi.org/10.1524/stuf.2008.0005
Rosen, Eric. 2016. Predicting the unpredictable: Capturing the apparent semi-regularity of rendaku voicing in Japanese through harmonic grammar. In Clem, Emily, Dawson, Virginia, Shen, Alice, Horan Skilton, Amalia, Bacon, Geoff, Cheng, Andrew & Maier, Erik Hans (eds.). Proceedings of BLS 42, 235-249. Berkeley Linguistic Society.
Selkirk, Elizabeth O. 1981. On prosodic structure and its relation to syntactic structure. In Fretheim, Thorstein (ed.). Nordic Prosody II: Papers from a Symposium, 111-140. Trondheim: TAPIR.
Selkirk, Elizabeth O. 1995. Sentence prosody: Intonation, stress and phrasing. In Goldsmith, John (ed.). The Handbook of Phonological Theory, 550-569. Cambridge, MA: Blackwell.
Selkirk, Elizabeth O. 2000. The interaction of constraints on prosodic phrasing. In Horne, Merle (ed.). Prosody: Theory and Experiment: Studies Presented to Gösta Bruce, 231-261. Dordrecht: Kluwer.
Selkirk, Elisabeth O. 2011. The syntax-phonology interface. In Goldsmith, John, Riggle, Jason & Yu, Alan C.L. The Handbook of Phonological Theory, 435-484. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell. https://doi.org/10.1002/9781444343069.ch14
Smolensky, Paul & Goldrick, Matthew. 2016. Gradient Symbolic Representations in Grammar: The Case of French Liaison. Unpublished manuscript, Johns Hopkins University & Northwestern University. [ROA 1552]
Smolensky, Paul & Legendre, Géraldine. 2006. The Harmonic Mind: From Neural Computation to Optimality-Theoretic Grammar. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Svenonius, Peter. 2004. On the edge. In Adger, David, de Cat, Cécile & Tsoulas, George (eds.). Peripheries: Syntactic Edges and Their Effects, 259-287. Dordrecht: Kluwer. https://doi.org/10.1007/1-4020-1910-6_11
Triantafyllidis, Manolis. 1991 [1941]. Neoeliniki Grammatiki (tis Dimotikis) [Modern Greek Grammar (of the Demotic Variety)]. Thessaloniki: Institute of Modern Greek Studies.
Vigário Marina. 2003. The Prosodic Word in European Portuguese. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
Vigário Marina. 2010. Prosodic structure between the prosodic word and the phonological phrase: Recursive nodes or an independent domain? The Linguistic Review 27: 485-530. https://doi.org/10.1515/tlir.2010.017
Published
How to Cite
Downloads
Copyright (c) 2021 Anthi Revithiadou, Giorgos Markopoulos

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.