
Contents
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22.1 Amphichronic Explanation 22.1 Amphichronic Explanation
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22.2 The Architecture of Grammar and the Life Cycle of Phonological Processes 22.2 The Architecture of Grammar and the Life Cycle of Phonological Processes
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22.2.1 Diachronic Predictions of the Modular Feedforward Architecture 22.2.1 Diachronic Predictions of the Modular Feedforward Architecture
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22.2.2 Neogrammarian Change 22.2.2 Neogrammarian Change
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22.2.3 The Life Cycle, Input Restructuring, and Rule Scattering 22.2.3 The Life Cycle, Input Restructuring, and Rule Scattering
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22.2.4 Morphology-Free Phonetics: the Case of English /l/-Darkening 22.2.4 Morphology-Free Phonetics: the Case of English /l/-Darkening
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22.3 Synchronic Patterns Created by the Life Cycle 22.3 Synchronic Patterns Created by the Life Cycle
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22.3.1 Rule Generalization and the Life Cycle 22.3.1 Rule Generalization and the Life Cycle
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22.3.2 Lenition Pathways and the Life Cycle 22.3.2 Lenition Pathways and the Life Cycle
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22.4 The Irrelevance of Ockham’s Razor 22.4 The Irrelevance of Ockham’s Razor
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22 Amphichronic Explanation and the Life Cycle of Phonological Processes
Get accessRicardo Bermúdez-Otero is Senior Lecturer in Linguistics and English Language at the University of Manchester. His research focuses on the morphosyntax-phonology and phonology-phonetics interfaces, with particular attention to diachronic issues. He works predominantly on Germanic (specially Old, Middle, and Present-day English) and Romance (Spanish, Catalan, and Portuguese). His publications on historical phonology include chapters in Optimality Theory and Language Change (2003, Kluwer), The Cambridge Handbook of Phonology (2007, CUP), and The Oxford Handbook of the History of English (2013, OUP).
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Published:16 December 2013
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Abstract
In amphichronic phonology, synchronic and diachronic explanation feed each other. The architecture of grammar predicts the possible modes of implementation of phonological change (including neogrammarian regularity) and the life cycle of sound patterns. In turn, the life cycle accounts for synchronic phenomena such as scattered rules and the relative stratal affiliation of cognate processes.
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