Abstract
In this paper, I propose an optimality-theoretic account of the generalisation that
deletion processes that apply to intervocalic biconsonantal clusters canonically
delete the first consonant (schematically, VC1C2V → VC2V). The approach to
contextual neutralisation proposed here has two main components. First, I follow
the licensing-by-cue framework (e.g. Steriade 1997) in identifying ‘weak’ elements
as those without strong perceptual cues. Second, I argue that the constraints
responsible for contextual neutralisation ‘target’ weak elements. This approach
captures the deletion generalisation above, because the relevant targeted constraint
prefers only the correct output VC2V (from which the weak consonant C1 has been
removed), not the incorrect output VC1V. Intuitively, the representation containing
a weak element (VC1C2V) is compelled to neutralise to a representation that
is perceptually very similar (VC2V). The targeted-constraint approach is formalised
by replacing the standard violation-based definition of OT optimisation
with a new definition – which is equivalent except when ‘targeted’ constraints are
involved – based on harmonic orderings. The approach is shown to extend to
certain cases of (i) contextually determined feature neutralisation and (ii) phonological opacity.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
62 articles.
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