
Contents
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7.1 Glottal stop as the source of H1 7.1 Glottal stop as the source of H1
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7.1.1 Co-occurrence of a glottal stop and H1 7.1.1 Co-occurrence of a glottal stop and H1
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7.1.2 Blocking of Laryngeal Alternation 7.1.2 Blocking of Laryngeal Alternation
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7.1.3 Blocking of Vowel Deletion/h-Metathesis 7.1.3 Blocking of Vowel Deletion/h-Metathesis
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7.1.4 Attraction of H3 7.1.4 Attraction of H3
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7.1.5 Alternation of H1 with lowfall tone 7.1.5 Alternation of H1 with lowfall tone
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7.1.6 Comparative evidence 7.1.6 Comparative evidence
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7.1.7 Summary 7.1.7 Summary
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7.2 Cases where a glottal stop failed to induce H1 7.2 Cases where a glottal stop failed to induce H1
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7.2.1 Glottal grade of Laryngeal Alternation 7.2.1 Glottal grade of Laryngeal Alternation
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7.2.2 Tonicity and lexical category 7.2.2 Tonicity and lexical category
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7.2.2.1 Tonicity of verbs 7.2.2.1 Tonicity of verbs
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7.2.2.2 Nouns, adjectives 7.2.2.2 Nouns, adjectives
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7.2.3 Summary 7.2.3 Summary
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7.3 A consequence of the analysis: direction of tone spreading 7.3 A consequence of the analysis: direction of tone spreading
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7.4 Conclusion 7.4 Conclusion
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Cite
Abstract
A glottal stop is the source of one type of high tone, H1. First, §7.1 discusses evidence for the analysis that H1 comes from a glottal stop, and argues that there is sufficient phonological evidence to posit the glottal stop. It is not the case that a glottal stop is always accompanied by H1, which complicates the analysis, but such cases can be accounted for by the OCP (§6.2) and by morphological factors, discussed in §7.2. That H1 comes from a glottal stop further supports my claim that H1 spreading is leftward (§7.3). Since in some cases positing a glottal stop, along with the tones it has induced, is admittedly abstract, I do consider alternatives. §7.4 concludes, giving language internal and external evidence and argue that the lexical representations should include a glottal stop, as well as the tone it has induced.
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