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Comparing Iconicity Trade-Offs in Cena and Libras during a Sign Language Production Task
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In: Languages; Volume 7; Issue 2; Pages: 98 (2022)
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Prominence Augmentation via Nasalization in Brazilian Portuguese
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In: Catalan Journal of Linguistics, Vol 18 (2019) (2019)
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The Acquisition Path of [w]-final Plurals in Brazilian Portuguese
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In: Journal of Portuguese Linguistics, Vol 17, Iss 1 (2018) (2018)
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The Acquisition Path of [w]-final Plurals in Brazilian Portuguese
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In: Journal of Portuguese Linguistics, Vol 17, Iss 1 (2018) (2018)
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Consent forms for the contributors to the Antia Whistling Language Documentation ; antia000 ; The Antia Whistling Language: documenting language use and language activism
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Photos of the participants and of the first whistling languages meeting day ; antia033 ; The Antia Whistling Language: documenting language use and language activism
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Phillipe Biu talks about whistling and the Occitan Whistling Language ; antia004 ; The Antia Whistling Language: documenting language use and language activism
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Photos from the first whistling languages meeting day ; antia035 ; The Antia Whistling Language: documenting language use and language activism
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Photos of promotional material for the first whistling languages meeting day ; antia034 ; The Antia Whistling Language: documenting language use and language activism
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Sabrine Cepeda talks about being a teacher for whistling languages ; antia005 ; The Antia Whistling Language: documenting language use and language activism
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Asymmetries in generalizing alternations to and from initial syllables. Language 88. 231–268
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In: http://becker.phonologist.org/projects/english/becker_nevins_levine_english_2012.pdf (2012)
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Miael Beer
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In: http://becker.phonologist.org/initialsyllfaith/becker_clemens_nevins_french_portuguese.pdf (2011)
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1 Past Participles in Mòcheno: allomorphy, alignment and the
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In: http://roa.rutgers.edu/files/1094-0810/1094-ALBER-0-0.PDF (2010)
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Two Case Studies in Phonological Universals: A View from Artificial Grammars
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In: Biolinguistics, Vol 4, Iss 2-3, Pp 218-233 (2010) (2010)
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To appear in Markedness in the Morphosemantics of φ-Features (special issue of
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In: http://epubs.surrey.ac.uk/4056/2/GGC-MUMSA-13.pdf (2009)
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Russian genitive plurals are impostors
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In: http://www.ic.sunysb.edu/Clubs/nels/jbailyn/knigFFF.pdf (2008)
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The role of feature-number and feature-type in processing Hindi verb agreement violations.
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In: http://www.colinphillips.net/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/nevins2007.pdf (2007)
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Last-conjunct agreement in Slovenian
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In: http://sabotin.p-ng.si/~fmarusic/pub/marusic%26al_2007_conjP_draft.pdf (2007)
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The role of feature-number and feature-type in processing Hindi verb agreement violations.
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In: http://people.umass.edu/bwdillon/nevinsetal_2007.pdf (2007)
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THE SURFEIT OF THE STIMULUS:ANALYTIC BIASES FILTER LEXICAL STATISTICS IN TURKISH LARYNGEALALTERNATIONS
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In: http://becker.phonologist.org/projects/surfeit/becker_ketrez_nevins_surfeit.pdf
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Abstract:
In an experimental task with novel words, we find that some lexical statistical regularities of Turkish phonotactics are productively extended in nonce words, while others are not. In particular, while laryngeal alternation rates in the lexicon can be predicted by the place of articulation of the stem-final stop, by word-length, and by the preceding vowel quality, this laryngeal alternation is only productively conditioned by place of articulation and word-length. Speakers ’ responses in a novel word task demonstrate that although they are attuned to the place of articulation and size ef-fects, they ignore preceding vowels, even though the lexicon contains this information in abun-dance. We interpret this finding as evidence that speakers distinguish between phonologically motivated generalizations and accidental generalizations. We propose that universal grammar (UG), a set of analytic biases, acts as a filter on the generalizations that humans can make: UG contains information about possible and impossible interactions between phonological elements. Omnivorous statistical models that do not have information about possible interactions incorrectly reproduce accidental generalizations, thus failing to model speakers ’ behavior.*
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Keyword:
laryngeal alternations; naturalness; surfeit of; Turkish; vowel-consonant interaction; wug test
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URL: http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.663.2723 http://becker.phonologist.org/projects/surfeit/becker_ketrez_nevins_surfeit.pdf
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