Temiar reduplication is a difficult piece of prosodic morphology. This paper
presents the first computational analysis of Temiar reduplication, using the
novel finite-state approach of One-Level Prosodic Morphology originally
developed by Walther (1999b, 2000). After reviewing both the data and the basic
tenets of One-level Prosodic Morphology, the analysis is laid out in some
detail, using the notation of the FSA Utilities finite-state toolkit (van Noord
1997). One important discovery is that in this approach one can easily define a
regular expression operator which ambiguously scans a string in the left- or
rightward direction for a certain prosodic property. This yields an elegant
account of base-length-dependent triggering of reduplication as found in
Temiar.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures. Finite-State Phonology: SIGPHON-2000, Proceedings
of the Fifth Workshop of the ACL Special Interest Group in Computational
Phonology, pp.13-21. Aug. 6, 2000. Luxembour