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Hits 21 – 40 of 189

21
Consonant harmony via correspondence: Evidence from Chumash
In: John J. McCarthy (2007)
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22
Consonant harmony via correspondence: Evidence from Chumash
In: Linguistics Department Faculty Publication Series (2007)
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23
Slouching toward optimality: Coda reduction in OT-CC
In: Linguistics Department Faculty Publication Series (2007)
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24
Derivations and levels of representation
In: Linguistics Department Faculty Publication Series (2007)
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25
Less than zero: Correspondence and the null output
In: Linguistics Department Faculty Publication Series (2007)
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26
What is Optimality Theory?
In: Linguistics Department Faculty Publication Series (2007)
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27
Morphology: Optimality Theory
In: John J. McCarthy (2006)
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28
Front matter and Preface
In: John J. McCarthy (2006)
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29
Prosodic morphology
In: John J. McCarthy (2006)
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30
Morphology: Optimality Theory
In: Linguistics Department Faculty Publication Series (2006)
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31
Prosodic morphology
In: Linguistics Department Faculty Publication Series (2006)
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32
Taking a free ride in morphophonemic learning
In: John J. McCarthy (2005)
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33
The length of stem-final vowels in Colloquial Arabic
In: John J. McCarthy (2005)
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34
Optimal paradigms
In: John J. McCarthy (2005)
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35
Optimal paradigms
In: Linguistics Department Faculty Publication Series (2005)
Abstract: Transderivational Correspondence and Uniform Exponence are two recent theories of surface resemblances among morphologically related words. This article describes the Optimal Paradigms theory, which incorporates elements of both. In OP, candidates consist of entire inflectional paradigms. Within each candidate paradigm, there is a correspondence relation from every paradigm member to every other paradigm member. Faithfulness constraints on this intraparadigmatic correspondence relation resist alternation within the paradigm. This model is illustrated and supported with a type of evidence that has not figured in previous discussions, the templatic structure of the Classical Arabic verb. Generalized Template Theory demands that templatic restrictions emerge from independently motivated constraints. The OP model supplies this kind of explanation for the permitted shapes of Arabic verbal templates.
Keyword: 2005; Morphology; Near Eastern Languages and Societies; Phonetics and Phonology
URL: https://scholarworks.umass.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1054&context=linguist_faculty_pubs
https://scholarworks.umass.edu/linguist_faculty_pubs/55
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36
Taking a free ride in morphophonemic learning
In: Linguistics Department Faculty Publication Series (2005)
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37
The length of stem-final vowels in Colloquial Arabic
In: Linguistics Department Faculty Publication Series (2005)
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38
Review of Janet C. E. Watson (2002) The Phonology and Morphology of Arabic
In: John J. McCarthy (2004)
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39
Headed spans and autosegmental spreading
In: John J. McCarthy (2004)
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40
Optimality Theory in Phonology: A Reader
In: John J. McCarthy (2004)
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