1-20 of 22
Keywords: abstractness
Sort by
Chapter
Published: 01 June 2009
... considered. Clements G N and E Hume coronality Fudge E C Goldsmith J A Pierrehumbert J place features abstractness Hungarian Mandarin Archangeli D and D Pulleyblank Chomsky A N distinctive feature notation phonetics vs phonology phonology vs phonetics transcription Gussmann E terminological...
Chapter
Published: 07 August 1997
...0 07 08 1997 This chapter helps you conquer another villain of read ability: abstractness. Let’s begin by defining it. Abstract writing is so general that readers constantly have to guess what it means. If I stopped there, that sentence would be abstract-you’d have to guess what I...
Chapter
Published: 18 September 2012
...This chapter describes an approach to linguistic research called Formal Generative Typology (FGT). FGT is a pragmatic and somewhat eclectic approach that is built on the idea of combining a generative-style toleration for abstractness in analysis with a typology-inspired interest in testing claims...
Chapter
Published: 22 October 2024
..., and unspecified (binary) features, as embraced by Hantgan and Davies (2012) in their analysis of the peculiarities of Bondu-so harmony patterns. Non-alternating anti-harmonic vowels have been analyzed as abstract vowels which do not have a surface correspondent in the language at hand. In the same spirit...
Chapter
Published: 22 October 2024
... assimilate (the Binarity Problem). Finally, given that harmony is the product of a rule, can later rules obscure its application (the Abstractness Problem)? morpheme s targets of harmony underlying forms etc Finnish abstractness acoustics assimilation borrowing constraints contrast contrastiveness...
Chapter
Published: 20 February 2020
...There Are No Such Things as Theories. Steven French, Oxford University Press (2020). © Steven French. DOI: 10.1093/oso/9780198848158.001.0001 In this chapter a well-known dilemma is presented for musical works, involving their purported abstract nature and creativity. A similar...
Chapter
Published: 23 March 1995
... on various levels of complexity and abstractness with minimal knowledge. However, he still lacked the intricate web of integrated knowledge required for context-appropriate, mature behaviour. Literacy early signs Sulzby E Teale W van Kleeck A Bruner J Letter recognition Ninio A Reading Vocabulary...
Chapter
Published: 03 March 2014
... of emotions. As explained in the linguistic category model and in construal-level theory, strategic shifts between abstract and concrete language use can account for fundamental attribution error, actor-observer bias, egocentric bias, linguistic-intergroup bias, and behavioral phenomena associated...
Chapter
Published: 01 June 2009
...An alternative to the standard views of phonology is presented, to take into account the critical issues raised in the preceding chapters. Declarative phonology is polysystemic, non-segmental and abstract; it specifically excludes derivation and deletion as valid phonological mechanisms...
Chapter
Published: 13 August 2018
...One of the central ways in which the long-standing debate between rationalists and empiricists surfaces in linguistics involves the putative existence of abstract phonological representations underlying seemingly more concrete surface forms. Linguists ranging from Panini to Chomsky and Halle have...
Chapter
Published: 15 October 2020
... Administration Building that was modern in the abstractness of its blocklike forms and its many innovations. AEG Turbine Factory Berlin Germany Amsterdam Stock Exchange Behrens Peter Berlage Hendrik Petrus Hitchcock Henry Russell Larkin Administration Building Post Office Savings Bank Vienna Austria...
Chapter
Published: 29 August 2013
... abstractness truths determiner conservativity language universals abstractness One of the issues that Bever has discussed throughout the years can be formulated as follows: are the basic internal structures of language and bona fide linguistic universals caused or uncaused? Another, more traditional...
Chapter
Published: 29 August 2013
...), set-local multicomponent grammars (MCTAG), abstract categorial grammars (ACG2,4), multiple context-free grammars (MCFG), Minimalist grammars (MG), and context-sensitive grammars (CSG)) are weakly equivalent in the sense that they define exactly the same sets of sentences. These grammars...
Chapter
Published: 01 March 2016
... 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...
Chapter
Published: 30 June 2016
...Many arguments for multiple realization begin with the claim that psychological states are computational states, and conclude the abstractness of computational states assures their multiple realizability. However, in many cases where a cognitive scientist offers a computational description...
Book
Published online: 20 September 2012
Published in print: 01 June 2009
... to the issues of biuniqueness and monosystemicity, segmentation, and phonetic implementation and abstractness; a final chapter deals with panlectal grammars....
Chapter
Published: 29 August 2013
... frequency mechanism in speech perception infants speech perception Bradley D C Forster K I and S M Chambers aphasia Gallistel C R and A P King memory Benavides Varela S familiarization words neonates prosodic cues abstractness vowels consonants language acquisition left hemisphere In 1970, I...
Chapter
Published: 29 August 2013
...This chapter argues that opaque phonological analyses based on abstract elements can be justified by employing domain-general reasoning. The authors treat abstractness in phonology from a Bayesian perspective by examining opacity in Kalaallisut, an Inuit language of Greenland. All other things...
Chapter
Published: 24 March 2022
... (abstractness, absolute neutralization)? Should phonological rules be distinguished in terms of phonetic vs. morphological function and motivation (natural processes)? Are there more or less natural interactions between the rules (feeding, bleeding, and opacity)? Do the rules aim at particular outputs either...
Chapter
Published: 16 May 1996
...0 16 05 1996 This chapter helps you conquer another villain of read­ ability: abstractness. Let’s begin by defining it. Abstract writing is so general that readers constantly have to guess what it means. If I stopped there, that sentence would be abstract-you’d have to guess what I...