46 research outputs found

    Compiling sonority scales with obstruent vowels

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    BLS 38: General Session and Thematic Session on Language Contac

    Chain shifts, strident vowels, and expanded vowel spaces

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    Dissimilation by surface correspondence in Aghem velarized diphthongs

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    Aghem exhibits a static co-occurrence restriction involving an intrusive velar segment present in two of the language's falling diphthongs. I provide a brief descriptive overview of these unusual phonetic structures and an Agreement by Correspondence (ABC) analysis of the phenomenon as dissimilation with the intent of avoiding suboptimal correspondence

    Language change for the worse

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    Many theories hold that language change, at least on a local level, is driven by a need for improvement. The present volume explores to what extent this assumption holds true, and whether there is a particular type of language change that we dub language change for the worse, i.e., change with a worsening effect that cannot be explained away as a side-effect of improvement in some other area of the linguistic system. The chapters of the volume, written by leading junior and senior scholars, combine expertise in diachronic and historical linguistics, typology, and formal modelling. They focus on different aspects of grammar (phonology, morphosyntax, semantics) in a variety of language families (Germanic, Romance, Austronesian, Bantu, Jê-Kaingang, Wu Chinese, Greek, Albanian, Altaic, Indo-Aryan, and languages of the Caucasus). The volume contributes to ongoing theoretical debates and discussions between linguists with different theoretical orientations

    Front Matter

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    The editors are pleased to present the proceedings of BLS 39, which took place in February 2013. We wish to thank our conference speakers and proceedings contributors for their considerable patience. The thirty-ninth annual meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society consisted of a general session along with parasessions on Space and Directionality, Languages of Southeast Asia, and Human Prehistory and Linguistics. All of the sessions are folded together in this issue. Editors: Matthew Faytak, Matthew Goss, Nicholas Baier, John Merrill, Kelsey Neely, Erin Donnelly, and Jevon Heath

    Nasal coda neutralization in Shanghai Mandarin: Articulatory and perceptual evidence (Supplementary materials)

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    Supplementary materials for the LabPhon paper
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