Branching structure within the syllable
- 1 September 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Journal of Linguistics
- Vol. 23 (2) , 359-377
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0022226700011312
Abstract
Arguments about constituency in syntax can often be settled by such methods as testing whether conjoining is possible, or whether a particular string can be moved as a single constituent by a transformational rule. In view of the isomorphism which has been noted between syntactic structures and phonological structures (cf. Clements & Keyser, 1983:25–26; the notion of ‘structural analogy’ in Anderson & Durand, 1986:3; and most notably the isomorphism pointed out between Sentence and Syllable by Kurylowicz, 1949), one might wonder whether such means are available for settling analogous arguments in phonology. It appears that they are not: in this area conjoining does not occur, while movement rules are either not recognized at all, or restricted to those accounting for processes of metathesis, which would normally be taken to be local transformations operating on single segments (cf. Vincent, 1986:318, fn. 3). What types of arguments, then, ARE available for settling questions of phonological constituency? This article attempts to explore some aspects of this question.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Syllable Structure and Stress in DutchLanguage, 1988
- A Theory of Phonological WeightLanguage, 1986
- Syllable Structure and Stress in Spanish: A Non-Linear AnalysisThe Modern Language Review, 1985
- Speech Errors as Linguistic EvidenceLanguage, 1976
- The Non-Anomalous Nature of Anomalous UtterancesLanguage, 1971
- SyllablesJournal of Linguistics, 1969
- A Phonological Grammar of SpanishHispanic Review, 1964
- Linguistic Play in Its Cultural ContextLanguage, 1959
- Tagalog Speech DisguiseLanguage, 1956
- Immediate Constituents of Mazateco SyllablesInternational Journal of American Linguistics, 1947