Affiliation:
1. Department of Linguistics, University of Arizona, Douglass Building 200E, Tucson, Arizona 85721-0028;
Abstract
▪ Abstract Optimality theory was introduced in the early 1990s as an alternative model of the organization of natural human language sound systems. This article provides an introduction to the model for the nonlinguist. The basic principles of optimality theory are introduced and explained (GEN, CON, and EVAL). Three important constraint families are explored (Faithfulness, Alignment, and Markedness). Illustrations are provided involving syllabification and vowel harmony in Tibetan and prosodic phonotactics in Tonkawa. The article closes with two general discussions. The first addresses recurring issues in phonological and linguistic analysis and sketches how optimality theory might account for these. The second points out how the explanations arrived at through optimality theory are providing new answers to familiar questions, as well as raising new questions for study.
Subject
Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Anthropology,Cultural Studies
Cited by
12 articles.
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1. An Optimality–theoretic Account of the Evolution of Intervocalic Sonorants from Latin to Spanish and Portuguese;Journal of Portuguese Linguistics;2017-04-04
2. Syllabification in Najdi Arabic: A Constraint Based Analysis;SSRN Electronic Journal;2016
3. References;Applied English Phonology;2011-03-21
4. Dating and Other Conventions;Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I;2010-08-29
5. Preface;Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I;2010-08-29