This book is relevant for phonologists, morphologists, Slavists and cognitive linguists, and addresses two questions: How can the morphology-phonology interface be accommodated in cognitive linguistics? Do morphophonological alternations have a meaning? These questions are explored via a comprehensi
Abstract Phonology in a Concrete Model: Cognitive Linguistics and the Morphology-Phonology Interface
โ Scribed by Tore Nesset
- Publisher
- De Gruyter Mouton
- Year
- 2008
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 264
- Series
- Cognitive Linguistics Research [CLR]; 40
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
This book is relevant for phonologists, morphologists, Slavists and cognitive linguists, and addresses two questions: How can the morphology-phonology interface be accommodated in cognitive linguistics? Do morphophonological alternations have a meaning? These questions are explored via a comprehensive analysis of stem alternations in Russian verbs. The analysis is couched in R.W. Langacker's Cognitive Grammar framework, and the book offers comparisons to other varieties of cognitive linguistics, such as Construction Grammar and Conceptual Integration. The proposed analysis is furthermore compared to rule-based and constraint-based approaches to phonology in generative grammar.
Without resorting to underlying representations or procedural rules, the Cognitive Linguistics framework facilitates an insightful approach to abstract phonology, offering the important advantage of restrictiveness. Cognitive Grammar provides an analysis of an entire morphophonological system in terms of a parsimonious set of theoretical constructs that all have cognitive motivation. No ad hoc machinery is invoked, and the analysis yields strong empirical predictions. Another advantage is that Cognitive Grammar can identify the meaning of morphophonological alternations. For example, it is argued that stem alternations in Russian verbs conspire to signal non-past meaning.
This book is accessible to a broad readership and offers a welcome contribution to phonology and morphology, which have been understudied in cognitive linguistics.
โฆ Table of Contents
Frontmatter
Contents
Chapter 1. To cut a long story short
Chapter 2. Cognitive grammar and the cognitive linguistics family
Chapter 3. A cognitive approach to phonology
Chapter 4. A cognitive approach to morphology
Chapter 5. Alternations in Cognitive Grammar: The truncation alternation and the one-stem/two-stem controversy
Chapter 6. Neutralization and phonology-morphology interaction: Exceptional infinitive
Chapter 7. Abstractness and alternatives to rule ordering and underlying representations: Exceptional past tense
Chapter 8. Opacity and product-oriented generalizations: Exceptional imperative
Chapter 9. Palatalization and lenition: The softening alternation
Chapter 10. Opacity and non-modularity: Conditioning the softening alternation
Chapter 11. The meaning of alternations: The truncation-softening conspiracy
Chapter 12. Conclusion: Looking back . . . and ahead
Backmatter
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