Title of article
The independence of phonology and morphology: The Celtic mutations
Author/Authors
Antony D. Green، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
40
From page
1946
To page
1985
Abstract
One of the most important insights of Optimality Theory (Prince and Smolensky, 1993) is that phonological processes can be reduced to the interaction between faithfulness and universal markedness principles. In the most constrained version of the theory, all phonological processes should be thus reducible. This hypothesis is tested by alternations that appear to be phonological but in which universal markedness principles appear to play no role. If we are to pursue the claim that all phonological processes depend on the interaction of faithfulness and markedness, then processes that are not dependent on markedness must lie outside phonology. In this paper I will examine a group of such processes, the initial consonant mutations of the Celtic languages, and argue that they belong entirely to the morphology of the languages, not the phonology.
Keywords
Celtic mutations , Word-based morphology , optimality theory
Journal title
Lingua(International Review of General Linguistics)
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
Lingua(International Review of General Linguistics)
Record number
1290502
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