Inherent variability and the obligatory contour principle
- 1 July 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Language Variation and Change
- Vol. 9 (2) , 149-164
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s095439450000185x
Abstract
English coronal stop deletion is constrained by the preceding segment, so that stops and sibilants favor deletion more than liquids and nonsibilant fricatives. Previous explanations of this constraint (e.g., the sonority hierarchy) have failed to account for the details, but we show that it can be comprehensively treated as a consequence of the obligatory contour principle (OCP). The OCP, introduced to account for a variety of categorical constraints against adjacent identical tones, segments, and so forth, can be generalized as a universal disfavoring of sequences of like features: *[αF] [αF]. Therefore, coronal stop deletion, which targets the set of segments /t, d/ defined by the features [−son, −cont, +cor], is favored when the preceding segment shares any of these features. But this requires adopting the assumption of inherent variability and interpreting the OCP as a probabilistic constraint with cumulative effects (the more shared features, the greater likelihood of deletion). This suggests an attractive theoretical integration of categorical and variable processes in the grammar.Keywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- Sonority and syllable structure in Chicano EnglishLanguage Variation and Change, 1996
- Contextual conditioning in variable lexical phonologyLanguage Variation and Change, 1991
- Explanation in variable phonology: An exponential model of morphological constraintsLanguage Variation and Change, 1991
- Feature Geometry and Dependency: A ReviewPhonetica, 1988
- Probability and linguistic variationSynthese, 1978
- Variable Rules: Performance as a Statistical Reflection of CompetenceLanguage, 1974
- Contraction, Deletion, and Inherent Variability of the English CopulaLanguage, 1969