An Optimality Theoretic account of verbal pattern-root consonant assimilation in Modern Standard Arabic
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Published:2020-06
Issue:2
Volume:67
Page:171-192
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ISSN:2559-8201
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Container-title:Acta Linguistica Academica
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language:
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Short-container-title:Acta Linguistica Hungarica
Affiliation:
1. English Language Department, Mútah University, Mútah, Jordan
Abstract
AbstractThe goal of this study is to propose an Optimality-Theoretic (OT) account of the assimilation that arises from adjacency between root and pattern consonants in the two verbal patterns “ɪn-a-a-” and “ɪ-ta-a” in Modern Standard Arabic (MSA). As for the pattern of “ɪn-a-a-”, ranking syntagmatic constraints higher than the faithfulness constraint of the root explains why the nasal /n/ agrees with the first radical in place features. In the second pattern (“ɪ-ta-a-”), ranking syntagmatic constraints higher than the faithfulness constraints correctly predicts the change of the pattern affix /t/ to [d] provided that it follows a voiced coronal consonant. This ranking also successfully explains why /t/ becomes emphatic (i.e., [tˤ]) when it occurs after an emphatic radical. Some constraints are posited in order to account for the change of pattern /t/ into /w/ when the latter comes after the vowel /ɪ/.
Publisher
Akademiai Kiado Zrt.
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics,Cultural Studies