Voice–Nasality Interaction and Headedness in Voiceless Nasals
Research output: Working paper
Standard Standard
University College London, 2013. p. 1 (UCL Working Papers in Linguistics; Vol. 25).
Research output: Working paper
HarvardHarvard
APA
CBE
MLA
VancouverVancouver
Author
RIS
TY - UNPB
T1 - Voice–Nasality Interaction and Headedness in Voiceless Nasals
AU - Breit, Florian
PY - 2013
Y1 - 2013
N2 - Most recent work in Element Theory assumes that nasality and true voicing are represented by the same element, where the headed element encodes voicing and the dependent element nasality (Backley, 2011; Nasukawa, 1999, 2000, 2005, et alii). This assumption is questioned here and it is proposed that the voicing–nasality contrast may be encoded the other way around. It is argued that this hypothesis is in better agreement with the means by which headedness may encode additional information at phonetic interpretation. Under the assumption of an L/H-Parameter, it is shown how, in line with Lombardi (1991) and Botma (2005), only H-systems can possibly encode voiceless (or more properly aspirated) nasals and how the hypothesis that headed |L| encodes nasality provides a better fit for these systems.
AB - Most recent work in Element Theory assumes that nasality and true voicing are represented by the same element, where the headed element encodes voicing and the dependent element nasality (Backley, 2011; Nasukawa, 1999, 2000, 2005, et alii). This assumption is questioned here and it is proposed that the voicing–nasality contrast may be encoded the other way around. It is argued that this hypothesis is in better agreement with the means by which headedness may encode additional information at phonetic interpretation. Under the assumption of an L/H-Parameter, it is shown how, in line with Lombardi (1991) and Botma (2005), only H-systems can possibly encode voiceless (or more properly aspirated) nasals and how the hypothesis that headed |L| encodes nasality provides a better fit for these systems.
KW - voicing
KW - nasality
KW - voiceless nasals
KW - laryngeal contrast
KW - Element Theory
M3 - Working paper
T3 - UCL Working Papers in Linguistics
SP - 1
BT - Voice–Nasality Interaction and Headedness in Voiceless Nasals
PB - University College London
ER -