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Travis G Bradley | University of California, Davis - Academia.edu

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Professor Bradley has published in Linguistics: An Interdisciplinary Journal of the Language Sciences, Probus, Lingua, Estudios de fonética experimental, Studies in Hispanic and Lusophone Linguistics, Southwest Journal of Linguistics, Lingua(gem), and the Journal of Educational Computing Research. He has contributed chapters to various books, including Fonética y fonología descriptivas de la lengua española, Optimality-Theoretic Studies in Spanish Phonology, Historical Romance Linguistics: Retrospective and Perspectives, Laboratory Approaches to Spanish Phonology, Experimental and Theoretical Approaches to Romance Linguistics, and Romance Linguistics 2007, Romance Linguistics 2010, Romance Linguistics 2012, among others. Along with Rafael Núñez Cedeño and Sonia Colina, he co-edited Fonología generativa contemporánea de la lengua española [2a edición] (Georgetown University Press, 2014).<br /><span class="u-fw700">Supervisors:&nbsp;</span>Dissertation advisor: John M. Lipski (2001, The Pennsylvania State University)<br /><b>Address:&nbsp;</b>Department of Spanish and Portuguese<br />University of California<br />One Shields Avenue<br />Davis, CA 95616<br />United States<br /><div class="js-profile-less-about u-linkUnstyled u-tcGrayDarker u-textDecorationUnderline u-displayNone">less</div></div></div><div class="ri-section"><div class="ri-section-header"><span>Interests</span><a class="ri-more-link js-profile-ri-list-card" data-click-track="profile-user-info-primary-research-interest" data-has-card-for-ri-list="8774974">View All (20)</a></div><div class="ri-tags-container"><a data-click-track="profile-user-info-expand-research-interests" data-has-card-for-ri-list="8774974" href="https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Phonetics_and_Phonology"><div id="js-react-on-rails-context" style="display:none" 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data-toggle="tab" href="#papers" role="tab" title="Papers"><span>33</span>&nbsp;<span class="ds2-5-body-sm-bold">Papers</span></a></li><li class="nav-chip" role="presentation"><a class="js-profile-docs-nav-section u-textTruncate" data-click-track="profile-works-tab" data-section-name="Books" data-toggle="tab" href="#books" role="tab" title="Books"><span>1</span>&nbsp;<span class="ds2-5-body-sm-bold">Books</span></a></li><li class="nav-chip" role="presentation"><a class="js-profile-docs-nav-section u-textTruncate" data-click-track="profile-works-tab" data-section-name="Thesis-Chapters" data-toggle="tab" href="#thesischapters" role="tab" title="Thesis Chapters"><span>1</span>&nbsp;<span class="ds2-5-body-sm-bold">Thesis Chapters</span></a></li><li class="nav-chip" role="presentation"><a class="js-profile-docs-nav-section u-textTruncate" data-click-track="profile-works-tab" data-section-name="Conference-Presentations" data-toggle="tab" href="#conferencepresentations" role="tab" title="Conference Presentations"><span>4</span>&nbsp;<span class="ds2-5-body-sm-bold">Conference Presentations</span></a></li></ul></div><div class="divider ds-divider-16" style="margin: 0px;"></div><div class="documents-container backbone-social-profile-documents" style="width: 100%;"><div class="u-taCenter"></div><div class="profile--tab_content_container js-tab-pane tab-pane active" id="all"><div class="profile--tab_heading_container js-section-heading" data-section="Papers" id="Papers"><h3 class="profile--tab_heading_container">Papers by Travis G Bradley</h3></div><div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="104961720"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/104961720/Incomplete_Resyllabification_and_Ambisyllabic_Gestural_Coupling_in_Spanish"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Incomplete Resyllabification and Ambisyllabic Gestural Coupling in Spanish" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/104547841/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/104961720/Incomplete_Resyllabification_and_Ambisyllabic_Gestural_Coupling_in_Spanish">Incomplete Resyllabification and Ambisyllabic Gestural Coupling in Spanish</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--coauthors"><span>by </span><span><a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://ucdavis.academia.edu/TravisBradley">Travis G Bradley</a>, <a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://uwlax.academia.edu/KimberlyMorris">Kimberly Morris</a>, and <a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://uci.academia.edu/LillianJones">Lillian Jones</a></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Loquens</span><span>, 2023</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">In the generative literature, the pattern of coronal fricative lenition found in the traditional ...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">In the generative literature, the pattern of coronal fricative lenition found in the traditional Chinato Spanish dialect is commonly cited as a phonological argument that the resyllabification of word-final prevocalic consonants is complete, in the sense that onsets derived by resyllabification are structurally identical to canonical (word-level) onsets. However, recent acoustic studies of Northern-Central Peninsular Spanish have problematized the completeness of resyllabification with experimental evidence that /s̺ / is shorter and more voiced as a derived onset than as a canonical onset. Using a split-gesture, competitive, coupled oscillator model of the syllable in Articulatory Phonology, which divides consonants into a separate constriction and release gesture, we propose a novel representation of ambisyllabicity that predicts the phonetic behavior of derived onset /s̺ / in Northern-Central Peninsular Spanish. We then show that ambisyllabic coupling permits a simpler phonological analysis of coronal fricative lenition in Chinato Spanish as compared to alternative accounts. Our analysis makes typological predictions that are confirmed by patterns from other contemporary Spanish varieties. Lastly, we examine the consequences of ambisyllabicity for the analysis of Spanish rhotic consonants, which have also been argued to support complete resyllabification. We offer an analysis of rhotics that is entirely compatible with an ambisyllabic representation of incomplete resyllabification.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="0ed0098b10e28201f16150ebb606404d" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:104547841,&quot;asset_id&quot;:104961720,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/104547841/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="104961720"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="104961720"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 104961720; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=104961720]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=104961720]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 104961720; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='104961720']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 104961720, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "0ed0098b10e28201f16150ebb606404d" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=104961720]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":104961720,"title":"Incomplete Resyllabification and Ambisyllabic Gestural Coupling in Spanish","translated_title":"","metadata":{"doi":"10.3989/loquens.2022.e094","abstract":"In the generative literature, the pattern of coronal fricative lenition found in the traditional Chinato Spanish dialect is commonly cited as a phonological argument that the resyllabification of word-final prevocalic consonants is complete, in the sense that onsets derived by resyllabification are structurally identical to canonical (word-level) onsets. 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$(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="95008212"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/95008212/Judeo_Spanish"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Judeo-Spanish" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/97309217/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/95008212/Judeo_Spanish">Judeo-Spanish</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Manual of Romance Phonetics and Phonology</span><span>, 2022</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Judeo-Spanish refers to the varieties of Spanish spoken by the Sephardic Jews, who were expelled ...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Judeo-Spanish refers to the varieties of Spanish spoken by the Sephardic Jews, who were expelled from Spain in 1492 and resettled around the Mediterranean, in North Africa and in areas of the Ottoman Empire. The language presents a mix of archaic features retained from medieval Ibero-Romance languages and innovative features arising from both internal change and contact with other languages. Despite its continued use for five centuries, Judeo-Spanish is at present severely endangered, which has prompted revitalization efforts and a renewed interest in the language from the perspectives of contemporary linguistic theory. This chapter presents a unified descriptive account of Judeo-Spanish phonology and phonetics. The account includes diachronic and synchronic comparisons across dialects and with other Ibero-Romance languages, as well as an examination of the phonological patterning of loanwords borrowed from co-territorial languages in the diaspora.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="3c5d57c3aaa064e3fa649901db460678" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:97309217,&quot;asset_id&quot;:95008212,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/97309217/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="95008212"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="95008212"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 95008212; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=95008212]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=95008212]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 95008212; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='95008212']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 95008212, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "3c5d57c3aaa064e3fa649901db460678" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=95008212]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":95008212,"title":"Judeo-Spanish","translated_title":"","metadata":{"doi":"10.1515/9783110550283","abstract":"Judeo-Spanish refers to the varieties of Spanish spoken by the Sephardic Jews, who were expelled from Spain in 1492 and resettled around the Mediterranean, in North Africa and in areas of the Ottoman Empire. 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Despite its continued use for five centuries, Judeo-Spanish is at present severely endangered, which has prompted revitalization efforts and a renewed interest in the language from the perspectives of contemporary linguistic theory. This chapter presents a unified descriptive account of Judeo-Spanish phonology and phonetics. The account includes diachronic and synchronic comparisons across dialects and with other Ibero-Romance languages, as well as an examination of the phonological patterning of loanwords borrowed from co-territorial languages in the diaspora.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/95008212/Judeo_Spanish","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2023-01-15T01:55:26.812-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":8774974,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":97309217,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/97309217/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Bradley_2022_Judeo_Spanish.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/97309217/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Judeo_Spanish.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/97309217/Bradley_2022_Judeo_Spanish-libre.pdf?1673777149=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DJudeo_Spanish.pdf\u0026Expires=1732452380\u0026Signature=BzlkK2r2kjIADQAZW7ZCyPO2BKjlqFB~dV~vdQQTeVzFHsasDih82~1q41WefQdDsvrGPDcqCfD3UZOyIS694nMmebfDtnZcmdjGLOzisLNqXk5l83q30zqOc7tx7XXBrqlRTeH94m~W07Lz74ttZ13ijmygIEL9unfVRLzIxgiU1K9zZyvowQyXgpRIixTfOnhO44JskIPvv4rSJD6QJSQdsdb2QP612hl28Vy22nYX0-rU4Ez~BE6UB3Vr7gbWrNefVN1duILIGfj~fYcWNkGVsbn4PovEsqbKu645ce19r03pC~LBPpAlus2JQYrt1TNcUuleR28b7IBCN0zlcw__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Judeo_Spanish","translated_slug":"","page_count":31,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","owner":{"id":8774974,"first_name":"Travis","middle_initials":"G","last_name":"Bradley","page_name":"TravisBradley","domain_name":"ucdavis","created_at":"2014-02-01T16:29:50.303-08:00","display_name":"Travis G Bradley","url":"https://ucdavis.academia.edu/TravisBradley"},"attachments":[{"id":97309217,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/97309217/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Bradley_2022_Judeo_Spanish.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/97309217/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Judeo_Spanish.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/97309217/Bradley_2022_Judeo_Spanish-libre.pdf?1673777149=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DJudeo_Spanish.pdf\u0026Expires=1732452380\u0026Signature=BzlkK2r2kjIADQAZW7ZCyPO2BKjlqFB~dV~vdQQTeVzFHsasDih82~1q41WefQdDsvrGPDcqCfD3UZOyIS694nMmebfDtnZcmdjGLOzisLNqXk5l83q30zqOc7tx7XXBrqlRTeH94m~W07Lz74ttZ13ijmygIEL9unfVRLzIxgiU1K9zZyvowQyXgpRIixTfOnhO44JskIPvv4rSJD6QJSQdsdb2QP612hl28Vy22nYX0-rU4Ez~BE6UB3Vr7gbWrNefVN1duILIGfj~fYcWNkGVsbn4PovEsqbKu645ce19r03pC~LBPpAlus2JQYrt1TNcUuleR28b7IBCN0zlcw__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":146379,"name":"Judeo-Spanish (Ladino) language","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Judeo-Spanish_Ladino_language"},{"id":316032,"name":"Ladino (Judeo-Spanish) Language and Literature","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Ladino_Judeo-Spanish_Language_and_Literature"},{"id":411582,"name":"History of the spanish language","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/History_of_the_spanish_language"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="94746370"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/94746370/Language_Contact_and_Phonological_Innovation_in_the_Voiced_Prepalatal_Obstruents_of_Judeo_Spanish"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Language Contact and Phonological Innovation in the Voiced Prepalatal Obstruents of Judeo-Spanish" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/97119040/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/94746370/Language_Contact_and_Phonological_Innovation_in_the_Voiced_Prepalatal_Obstruents_of_Judeo_Spanish">Language Contact and Phonological Innovation in the Voiced Prepalatal Obstruents of Judeo-Spanish</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--coauthors"><span>by </span><span><a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://ucdavis.academia.edu/TravisBradley">Travis G Bradley</a> and <a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://independent.academia.edu/ClaireJuliaLozano">Claire Julia Lozano</a></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">This article traces the development of voiced prepalatal obstruents /dʒ/ and /ʒ/ in Judeo-Spanish...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">This article traces the development of voiced prepalatal obstruents /dʒ/ and /ʒ/ in Judeo-Spanish, the language spoken by the Sephardic Jews since before their expulsion from late-15th century Spain. Using Medieval Spanish as a comparative starting point, we examine diachronic innovations in the phonological status and distribution of affricate /dʒ/ and fricative /ʒ/ in Judeo-Spanish during the diaspora, focusing in particular on the effects of lexical borrowing from Turkish and French in territories of the former Ottoman Empire. In contemporary Sephardic communities that are in contact with non-Sephardic varieties of Mainstream Spanish, some speakers occasionally replace syllable-initial /∫/, /dʒ/, and /ʒ/ in certain Judeo-Spanish words by a voiceless velar /x/ in efforts to accommodate the pronunciation of the corresponding Mainstream Spanish cognate form. We provide a novel analysis of Judeo-Spanish voiced prepalatal obstruents, including their diachronic and synchronic variation under language contact. The analysis combines a constraint-based approach to phonological alternations, as formalized in Optimality Theory, with a usage-based representation of the mental lexicon, as proposed in Exemplar Theory, to account for speaker- and word-specific variability. A hybrid theoretical model provides a more nuanced understanding of the relationship between lexicon and grammar in Judeo-Spanish phonology than is available in previous structuralist descriptions.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="4a2e11edb7014a4cd7ad546a5363ebec" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:97119040,&quot;asset_id&quot;:94746370,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/97119040/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="94746370"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="94746370"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 94746370; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=94746370]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=94746370]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 94746370; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='94746370']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 94746370, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "4a2e11edb7014a4cd7ad546a5363ebec" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=94746370]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":94746370,"title":"Language Contact and Phonological Innovation in the Voiced Prepalatal Obstruents of Judeo-Spanish","translated_title":"","metadata":{"doi":"10.3390/languages7040313","volume":"7","abstract":"This article traces the development of voiced prepalatal obstruents /dʒ/ and /ʒ/ in Judeo-Spanish, the language spoken by the Sephardic Jews since before their expulsion from late-15th century Spain. Using Medieval Spanish as a comparative starting point, we examine diachronic innovations in the phonological status and distribution of affricate /dʒ/ and fricative /ʒ/ in Judeo-Spanish during the diaspora, focusing in particular on the effects of lexical borrowing from Turkish and French in territories of the former Ottoman Empire. In contemporary Sephardic communities that are in contact with non-Sephardic varieties of Mainstream Spanish, some speakers occasionally replace syllable-initial /∫/, /dʒ/, and /ʒ/ in certain Judeo-Spanish words by a voiceless velar /x/ in efforts to accommodate the pronunciation of the corresponding Mainstream Spanish cognate form. We provide a novel analysis of Judeo-Spanish voiced prepalatal obstruents, including their diachronic and synchronic variation under language contact. The analysis combines a constraint-based approach to phonological alternations, as formalized in Optimality Theory, with a usage-based representation of the mental lexicon, as proposed in Exemplar Theory, to account for speaker- and word-specific variability. A hybrid theoretical model provides a more nuanced understanding of the relationship between lexicon and grammar in Judeo-Spanish phonology than is available in previous structuralist descriptions.","journal_name":"Languages","page_numbers":"313","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2022,"errors":{}}},"translated_abstract":"This article traces the development of voiced prepalatal obstruents /dʒ/ and /ʒ/ in Judeo-Spanish, the language spoken by the Sephardic Jews since before their expulsion from late-15th century Spain. Using Medieval Spanish as a comparative starting point, we examine diachronic innovations in the phonological status and distribution of affricate /dʒ/ and fricative /ʒ/ in Judeo-Spanish during the diaspora, focusing in particular on the effects of lexical borrowing from Turkish and French in territories of the former Ottoman Empire. In contemporary Sephardic communities that are in contact with non-Sephardic varieties of Mainstream Spanish, some speakers occasionally replace syllable-initial /∫/, /dʒ/, and /ʒ/ in certain Judeo-Spanish words by a voiceless velar /x/ in efforts to accommodate the pronunciation of the corresponding Mainstream Spanish cognate form. We provide a novel analysis of Judeo-Spanish voiced prepalatal obstruents, including their diachronic and synchronic variation under language contact. 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$(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="44719536"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/44719536/Spanish_rhotics_and_the_phonetics_phonology_interface"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Spanish rhotics and the phonetics-phonology interface" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/95422687/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/44719536/Spanish_rhotics_and_the_phonetics_phonology_interface">Spanish rhotics and the phonetics-phonology interface</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>The Routledge Handbook of Spanish Phonology</span><span>, 2020</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">This chapter examines the patterning of rhotics in North-Central Peninsular Spanish within the co...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">This chapter examines the patterning of rhotics in North-Central Peninsular Spanish within the context of contemporary research on the phonetics-phonology interface. As phonological categories, the apico-alveolar tap and trill are in contrastive distribution between vowels within the morphological word. The contrast is neutralized elsewhere: within a syllable, prenuclear rhotics are in complementary distribution, while postnuclear rhotics are in free variation. Experimental studies have provided detailed information about the production and perception of these consonants, whose phonetic realization is much more continuous and gradient than suggested by the discrete and categorical symbols of broad transcription. This chapter presents a novel analysis of Spanish rhotics that formalizes a modular interface between an optimization-based phonology and an implementation-based phonetics. Both operate on articulatory gestures that can be coupled, or coordinated with each other in time, as represented in an intergestural coupling graph. The phonology uses abstract phonetic knowledge about perceptual distinctiveness to help optimize the distribution of consonant duration contrasts. The distribution of rhotics in the phonological output is predicted by an interaction among perceptibility, faithfulness to input gestures, and markedness constraints on rhotic-vowel coupling. When optimal coupling graphs are phonetically implemented, lawful changes in the overlap and magnitude of gestures give rise to gradient and continuous variation in the articulatory and acoustic output. Combining perceptual distinctiveness with gestural coupling makes possible a simpler analysis of the phonological distribution of Spanish rhotics, as compared with two alternative theoretical accounts. The proposed analysis distinguishes between phonology and phonetics as distinct but representationally linked modules. There is no transduction from categorical segments and features into gradient physical parameters, only optimization and implementation of intergestural coupling graphs.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="f2b6914e0b4895fa8300b45e6ae23240" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:95422687,&quot;asset_id&quot;:44719536,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/95422687/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="44719536"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="44719536"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 44719536; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=44719536]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=44719536]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 44719536; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='44719536']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 44719536, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "f2b6914e0b4895fa8300b45e6ae23240" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=44719536]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":44719536,"title":"Spanish rhotics and the phonetics-phonology interface","translated_title":"","metadata":{"doi":"10.4324/9781315228112","abstract":"This chapter examines the patterning of rhotics in North-Central Peninsular Spanish within the context of contemporary research on the phonetics-phonology interface. As phonological categories, the apico-alveolar tap and trill are in contrastive distribution between vowels within the morphological word. The contrast is neutralized elsewhere: within a syllable, prenuclear rhotics are in complementary distribution, while postnuclear rhotics are in free variation. Experimental studies have provided detailed information about the production and perception of these consonants, whose phonetic realization is much more continuous and gradient than suggested by the discrete and categorical symbols of broad transcription. This chapter presents a novel analysis of Spanish rhotics that formalizes a modular interface between an optimization-based phonology and an implementation-based phonetics. Both operate on articulatory gestures that can be coupled, or coordinated with each other in time, as represented in an intergestural coupling graph. The phonology uses abstract phonetic knowledge about perceptual distinctiveness to help optimize the distribution of consonant duration contrasts. The distribution of rhotics in the phonological output is predicted by an interaction among perceptibility, faithfulness to input gestures, and markedness constraints on rhotic-vowel coupling. When optimal coupling graphs are phonetically implemented, lawful changes in the overlap and magnitude of gestures give rise to gradient and continuous variation in the articulatory and acoustic output. Combining perceptual distinctiveness with gestural coupling makes possible a simpler analysis of the phonological distribution of Spanish rhotics, as compared with two alternative theoretical accounts. The proposed analysis distinguishes between phonology and phonetics as distinct but representationally linked modules. 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Experimental studies have provided detailed information about the production and perception of these consonants, whose phonetic realization is much more continuous and gradient than suggested by the discrete and categorical symbols of broad transcription. This chapter presents a novel analysis of Spanish rhotics that formalizes a modular interface between an optimization-based phonology and an implementation-based phonetics. Both operate on articulatory gestures that can be coupled, or coordinated with each other in time, as represented in an intergestural coupling graph. The phonology uses abstract phonetic knowledge about perceptual distinctiveness to help optimize the distribution of consonant duration contrasts. The distribution of rhotics in the phonological output is predicted by an interaction among perceptibility, faithfulness to input gestures, and markedness constraints on rhotic-vowel coupling. When optimal coupling graphs are phonetically implemented, lawful changes in the overlap and magnitude of gestures give rise to gradient and continuous variation in the articulatory and acoustic output. Combining perceptual distinctiveness with gestural coupling makes possible a simpler analysis of the phonological distribution of Spanish rhotics, as compared with two alternative theoretical accounts. The proposed analysis distinguishes between phonology and phonetics as distinct but representationally linked modules. 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$(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="7095921"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/7095921/Descripci%C3%B3n_fon%C3%A9tica_de_las_consonantes_r%C3%B3ticas"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Descripción fonética de las consonantes róticas" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/7095921/Descripci%C3%B3n_fon%C3%A9tica_de_las_consonantes_r%C3%B3ticas">Descripción fonética de las consonantes róticas</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Fonética y fonología descriptivas de la lengua española. Juana Gil y Joaquim Llisterri (eds.). Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press</span><span>, 2024</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="7095921"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="7095921"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 7095921; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=7095921]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=7095921]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 7095921; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='7095921']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 7095921, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=7095921]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":7095921,"title":"Descripción fonética de las consonantes róticas","translated_title":"","metadata":{"page_numbers":"751-789","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2024,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Fonética y fonología descriptivas de la lengua española. 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Common in simple responses such as sif ‘yes’ and nof ‘no’, this sociolectal feature, referred to as sifeísimo (Adams 2015), has been attributed to the devoicing of the common filler word, pues ‘then, well, cos’ (Haboud and de la Vega 2008). The present analysis utilizes moraic phonology, couched in Optimality Theory (Prince and Smolensky 1993/2004; McCarthy and Prince 1995), along with the principles of gestural coordination, as represented in Articulatory Phonology (Browman and Goldstein 1989, 1990), to show how an existing dialectal preference for vowel devoicing and the bilabial pronunciation of &lt;f&gt; favor the emergence of sifeísmo in the Quito context.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="417bdf7564ec507a84a829604ecb2660" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:95423543,&quot;asset_id&quot;:37697314,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/95423543/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="37697314"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="37697314"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 37697314; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=37697314]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=37697314]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 37697314; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='37697314']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 37697314, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "417bdf7564ec507a84a829604ecb2660" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=37697314]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":37697314,"title":"Phonological and Phonetic Aspects of Sifeísmo in Quito Spanish","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"This chapter employs a phonetics-phonology approach to describe the emergence of an emphatic, utterance final -f observed in informal speech in Quito Spanish. Common in simple responses such as sif ‘yes’ and nof ‘no’, this sociolectal feature, referred to as sifeísimo (Adams 2015), has been attributed to the devoicing of the common filler word, pues ‘then, well, cos’ (Haboud and de la Vega 2008). The present analysis utilizes moraic phonology, couched in Optimality Theory (Prince and Smolensky 1993/2004; McCarthy and Prince 1995), along with the principles of gestural coordination, as represented in Articulatory Phonology (Browman and Goldstein 1989, 1990), to show how an existing dialectal preference for vowel devoicing and the bilabial pronunciation of \u003cf\u003e favor the emergence of sifeísmo in the Quito context.","page_numbers":"227-250","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2022,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Ecuadorian Spanish in the 21st Century: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives, edited by Rosario Gómez, Erin O'Rourke, and Christina García, Cambridge Scholars Publishing."},"translated_abstract":"This chapter employs a phonetics-phonology approach to describe the emergence of an emphatic, utterance final -f observed in informal speech in Quito Spanish. Common in simple responses such as sif ‘yes’ and nof ‘no’, this sociolectal feature, referred to as sifeísimo (Adams 2015), has been attributed to the devoicing of the common filler word, pues ‘then, well, cos’ (Haboud and de la Vega 2008). The present analysis utilizes moraic phonology, couched in Optimality Theory (Prince and Smolensky 1993/2004; McCarthy and Prince 1995), along with the principles of gestural coordination, as represented in Articulatory Phonology (Browman and Goldstein 1989, 1990), to show how an existing dialectal preference for vowel devoicing and the bilabial pronunciation of \u003cf\u003e favor the emergence of sifeísmo in the Quito context.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/37697314/Phonological_and_Phonetic_Aspects_of_Sifei_smo_in_Quito_Spanish","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2018-11-03T16:36:44.189-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":8774974,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[{"id":32013242,"work_id":37697314,"tagging_user_id":8774974,"tagged_user_id":42019077,"co_author_invite_id":null,"email":"k***t@ucdavis.edu","affiliation":"University of Denver","display_order":-1,"name":"Kathleen Guerra","title":"Phonological and Phonetic Aspects of Sifeísmo in Quito Spanish"}],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":95423543,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/95423543/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Guerra_and_Bradley_2022_Phonological_and_Phonetic_Aspects_of_Sifeismo_in_Quito_Spanish.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/95423543/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Phonological_and_Phonetic_Aspects_of_Sif.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/95423543/Guerra_and_Bradley_2022_Phonological_and_Phonetic_Aspects_of_Sifeismo_in_Quito_Spanish-libre.pdf?1670485631=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DPhonological_and_Phonetic_Aspects_of_Sif.pdf\u0026Expires=1732452381\u0026Signature=OfHc212266b8Swdi7xIIAffPnEyrI~86MpeO20Tc7Gm9wsgkrQjSIO8RUoXnYPROi-O9OdysmrN~rGQCe4ouxG4wT0TYphto6jcR~HD9B~LHQYkyHMPdVyd5zWxy0qFLRiuxhuCMvdyks2T4F4zChGEJ5XYxd6x3drg6np9OHhbjUZNZQkdkrQax52UrHbxuKKxlN2-y5kSA64dfrBJrOIvGqItC0XrSYYPyl9PE2L~L5UdsvNs70rsBO3pY8vRocNkn9GmYhQFx2gLIEyCjKoo8UMkFBuqSKbRbBnykRl-16rrsxeesbBj4lNMHucGu~4jle-pOtBKCSODrzgMNiQ__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Phonological_and_Phonetic_Aspects_of_Sifei_smo_in_Quito_Spanish","translated_slug":"","page_count":24,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","owner":{"id":8774974,"first_name":"Travis","middle_initials":"G","last_name":"Bradley","page_name":"TravisBradley","domain_name":"ucdavis","created_at":"2014-02-01T16:29:50.303-08:00","display_name":"Travis G Bradley","url":"https://ucdavis.academia.edu/TravisBradley"},"attachments":[{"id":95423543,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/95423543/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Guerra_and_Bradley_2022_Phonological_and_Phonetic_Aspects_of_Sifeismo_in_Quito_Spanish.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/95423543/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Phonological_and_Phonetic_Aspects_of_Sif.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/95423543/Guerra_and_Bradley_2022_Phonological_and_Phonetic_Aspects_of_Sifeismo_in_Quito_Spanish-libre.pdf?1670485631=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DPhonological_and_Phonetic_Aspects_of_Sif.pdf\u0026Expires=1732452381\u0026Signature=OfHc212266b8Swdi7xIIAffPnEyrI~86MpeO20Tc7Gm9wsgkrQjSIO8RUoXnYPROi-O9OdysmrN~rGQCe4ouxG4wT0TYphto6jcR~HD9B~LHQYkyHMPdVyd5zWxy0qFLRiuxhuCMvdyks2T4F4zChGEJ5XYxd6x3drg6np9OHhbjUZNZQkdkrQax52UrHbxuKKxlN2-y5kSA64dfrBJrOIvGqItC0XrSYYPyl9PE2L~L5UdsvNs70rsBO3pY8vRocNkn9GmYhQFx2gLIEyCjKoo8UMkFBuqSKbRbBnykRl-16rrsxeesbBj4lNMHucGu~4jle-pOtBKCSODrzgMNiQ__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="37697313"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/37697313/Aspectos_fonolo_gicos_y_fone_ticos_del_sifei_smo_en_el_espan_ol_quiten_o"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Aspectos fonológicos y fonéticos del sifeísmo en el español quiteño" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/57688465/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/37697313/Aspectos_fonolo_gicos_y_fone_ticos_del_sifei_smo_en_el_espan_ol_quiten_o">Aspectos fonológicos y fonéticos del sifeísmo en el español quiteño</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--coauthors"><span>by </span><span><a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://udenver.academia.edu/KathleenGuerra">Kathleen Guerra</a> and <a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://ucdavis.academia.edu/TravisBradley">Travis G Bradley</a></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Aspectos fonológicos y fonéticos del sifeísmo en el español quiteño</span><span>, 2019</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">This is a 2019 translation into Spanish of the following article: Guerra, Kathleen S., and Tra...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">This is a 2019 translation into Spanish of the following article: <br /> <br />Guerra, Kathleen S., and Travis G. Bradley. 2022. Phonological and Phonetic Aspects of Sifeísmo in Quito Spanish. In Ecuadorian Spanish in the 21st Century: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives, edited by Rosario Gómez, Erin O&#39;Rourke, and Christina García, Cambridge Scholars Publishing, pp. 227-250.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="7f2b6bc81ce053e992cf4dcb2f05750b" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:57688465,&quot;asset_id&quot;:37697313,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/57688465/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="37697313"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="37697313"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 37697313; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=37697313]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=37697313]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 37697313; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='37697313']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 37697313, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "7f2b6bc81ce053e992cf4dcb2f05750b" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=37697313]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":37697313,"title":"Aspectos fonológicos y fonéticos del sifeísmo en el español quiteño","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"This is a 2019 translation into Spanish of the following article:\r\n\r\nGuerra, Kathleen S., and Travis G. Bradley. 2022. Phonological and Phonetic Aspects of Sifeísmo in Quito Spanish. In Ecuadorian Spanish in the 21st Century: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives, edited by Rosario Gómez, Erin O'Rourke, and Christina García, Cambridge Scholars Publishing, pp. 227-250.\r\n","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2019,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Aspectos fonológicos y fonéticos del sifeísmo en el español quiteño"},"translated_abstract":"This is a 2019 translation into Spanish of the following article:\r\n\r\nGuerra, Kathleen S., and Travis G. Bradley. 2022. Phonological and Phonetic Aspects of Sifeísmo in Quito Spanish. In Ecuadorian Spanish in the 21st Century: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives, edited by Rosario Gómez, Erin O'Rourke, and Christina García, Cambridge Scholars Publishing, pp. 227-250.\r\n","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/37697313/Aspectos_fonolo_gicos_y_fone_ticos_del_sifei_smo_en_el_espan_ol_quiten_o","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2018-11-03T16:36:44.125-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":8774974,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[{"id":32013240,"work_id":37697313,"tagging_user_id":8774974,"tagged_user_id":42019077,"co_author_invite_id":null,"email":"k***t@ucdavis.edu","affiliation":"University of Denver","display_order":-1,"name":"Kathleen Guerra","title":"Aspectos fonológicos y fonéticos del sifeísmo en el español quiteño"}],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":57688465,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/57688465/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Guerra___Bradley_2019_-_Aspectos_fonologicos_y_foneticos_del_sifeismo_en_el_espanol_quiteno.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/57688465/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Aspectos_fonolo_gicos_y_fone_ticos_del_s.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/57688465/Guerra___Bradley_2019_-_Aspectos_fonologicos_y_foneticos_del_sifeismo_en_el_espanol_quiteno-libre.pdf?1541288520=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DAspectos_fonolo_gicos_y_fone_ticos_del_s.pdf\u0026Expires=1732452381\u0026Signature=GyfZi~5QOAA2DwbHOoklfX8YhQJGjWfg7fqux~1DZNKE8mSNl7~02HOpjeol3oMFEYFuSCFwOVbI0lJ-9E4HXERwhWeAs3HWlmKYZzq4WuwZ~tB85yG4QKPwrM8XJBElyw6vaFFGDxvTeOj8unyAoI5Xu-D~VcOxBKbm0~8sLpJcUH8zVs0O0VAySLY5~R32iooeJCgF3zrKwGMXTeNWYigLIAkdoJIRgbwi5-Mi2mOAFGItBxf6eVwA5jrSRWd~R4weezV4Ht7PCC6EYICkWFjlAg~ewm1coG1MRLXBLcw6haY2gezjURHX-smroY69WjPQ16m9cWMs~7S230nk6A__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Aspectos_fonolo_gicos_y_fone_ticos_del_sifei_smo_en_el_espan_ol_quiten_o","translated_slug":"","page_count":17,"language":"es","content_type":"Work","owner":{"id":8774974,"first_name":"Travis","middle_initials":"G","last_name":"Bradley","page_name":"TravisBradley","domain_name":"ucdavis","created_at":"2014-02-01T16:29:50.303-08:00","display_name":"Travis G Bradley","url":"https://ucdavis.academia.edu/TravisBradley"},"attachments":[{"id":57688465,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/57688465/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Guerra___Bradley_2019_-_Aspectos_fonologicos_y_foneticos_del_sifeismo_en_el_espanol_quiteno.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/57688465/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Aspectos_fonolo_gicos_y_fone_ticos_del_s.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/57688465/Guerra___Bradley_2019_-_Aspectos_fonologicos_y_foneticos_del_sifeismo_en_el_espanol_quiteno-libre.pdf?1541288520=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DAspectos_fonolo_gicos_y_fone_ticos_del_s.pdf\u0026Expires=1732452381\u0026Signature=GyfZi~5QOAA2DwbHOoklfX8YhQJGjWfg7fqux~1DZNKE8mSNl7~02HOpjeol3oMFEYFuSCFwOVbI0lJ-9E4HXERwhWeAs3HWlmKYZzq4WuwZ~tB85yG4QKPwrM8XJBElyw6vaFFGDxvTeOj8unyAoI5Xu-D~VcOxBKbm0~8sLpJcUH8zVs0O0VAySLY5~R32iooeJCgF3zrKwGMXTeNWYigLIAkdoJIRgbwi5-Mi2mOAFGItBxf6eVwA5jrSRWd~R4weezV4Ht7PCC6EYICkWFjlAg~ewm1coG1MRLXBLcw6haY2gezjURHX-smroY69WjPQ16m9cWMs~7S230nk6A__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="33415308"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/33415308/Sonority_Distance_and_Similarity_Avoidance_Effects_in_Moroccan_Judeo_Spanish"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Sonority Distance and Similarity Avoidance Effects in Moroccan Judeo-Spanish" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/53467881/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/33415308/Sonority_Distance_and_Similarity_Avoidance_Effects_in_Moroccan_Judeo_Spanish">Sonority Distance and Similarity Avoidance Effects in Moroccan Judeo-Spanish</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--coauthors"><span>by </span><span><a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://ucdavis.academia.edu/TravisBradley">Travis G Bradley</a> and <a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://miis.academia.edu/JacobAdams">Jacob Adams</a></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Linguistics: An Interdisciplinary Journal of the Language Sciences</span><span>, 2018</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">This article investigates consonant gemination in late 19th-and early 20th-century haketía, a now...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">This article investigates consonant gemination in late 19th-and early 20th-century haketía, a now moribund, regional dialect of Judeo-Spanish spoken in northern Morocco since the late 15th century. Some, but not all, consonant clusters arising across a word boundary undergo regressive total assimilation, e.g. [n.n] siudad ninguna &#39;no city&#39; but [z.n] laz niñas &#39;the girls&#39;. We present novel descriptive generalizations to show that regressive gemination is sensitive to the degree of sonority distance between the coda and the onset. Evidence of parasitic harmony comes from lateral+consonant clusters, which undergo gemination only if the target and trigger consonants are already similar in some respect. In the framework of Optimality Theory, we formalize syllable contact as a relational hierarchy of *DISTANCE constraints and capture parasitic harmony effects by similarity avoidance, or Obligatory Contour Principle, constraints against adjacent consonants with identical manner and/or place features. These markedness constraints interact with other universal faithfulness and markedness constraints in a language-specific ranking that predicts the attested patterns of regressive gemination. This study lends further support to sonority distance effects and gradient syllable contact in phonological theory and shows that similarity avoidance is also necessary to give a full account of regressive gemination in Moroccan Judeo-Spanish.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="382fcf5be5b0a3bc6c5e569d49a3db4e" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:53467881,&quot;asset_id&quot;:33415308,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/53467881/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="33415308"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="33415308"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 33415308; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=33415308]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=33415308]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 33415308; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='33415308']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 33415308, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "382fcf5be5b0a3bc6c5e569d49a3db4e" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=33415308]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":33415308,"title":"Sonority Distance and Similarity Avoidance Effects in Moroccan Judeo-Spanish","translated_title":"","metadata":{"doi":"10.1515/ling-2018-0028","issue":"6","volume":"56","abstract":"This article investigates consonant gemination in late 19th-and early 20th-century haketía, a now moribund, regional dialect of Judeo-Spanish spoken in northern Morocco since the late 15th century. Some, but not all, consonant clusters arising across a word boundary undergo regressive total assimilation, e.g. [n.n] siudad ninguna 'no city' but [z.n] laz niñas 'the girls'. We present novel descriptive generalizations to show that regressive gemination is sensitive to the degree of sonority distance between the coda and the onset. Evidence of parasitic harmony comes from lateral+consonant clusters, which undergo gemination only if the target and trigger consonants are already similar in some respect. In the framework of Optimality Theory, we formalize syllable contact as a relational hierarchy of *DISTANCE constraints and capture parasitic harmony effects by similarity avoidance, or Obligatory Contour Principle, constraints against adjacent consonants with identical manner and/or place features. These markedness constraints interact with other universal faithfulness and markedness constraints in a language-specific ranking that predicts the attested patterns of regressive gemination. This study lends further support to sonority distance effects and gradient syllable contact in phonological theory and shows that similarity avoidance is also necessary to give a full account of regressive gemination in Moroccan Judeo-Spanish.","page_numbers":"1463-1511","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2018,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Linguistics: An Interdisciplinary Journal of the Language Sciences"},"translated_abstract":"This article investigates consonant gemination in late 19th-and early 20th-century haketía, a now moribund, regional dialect of Judeo-Spanish spoken in northern Morocco since the late 15th century. Some, but not all, consonant clusters arising across a word boundary undergo regressive total assimilation, e.g. [n.n] siudad ninguna 'no city' but [z.n] laz niñas 'the girls'. We present novel descriptive generalizations to show that regressive gemination is sensitive to the degree of sonority distance between the coda and the onset. Evidence of parasitic harmony comes from lateral+consonant clusters, which undergo gemination only if the target and trigger consonants are already similar in some respect. In the framework of Optimality Theory, we formalize syllable contact as a relational hierarchy of *DISTANCE constraints and capture parasitic harmony effects by similarity avoidance, or Obligatory Contour Principle, constraints against adjacent consonants with identical manner and/or place features. These markedness constraints interact with other universal faithfulness and markedness constraints in a language-specific ranking that predicts the attested patterns of regressive gemination. This study lends further support to sonority distance effects and gradient syllable contact in phonological theory and shows that similarity avoidance is also necessary to give a full account of regressive gemination in Moroccan Judeo-Spanish.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/33415308/Sonority_Distance_and_Similarity_Avoidance_Effects_in_Moroccan_Judeo_Spanish","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2017-06-11T15:01:31.455-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":8774974,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[{"id":29294712,"work_id":33415308,"tagging_user_id":8774974,"tagged_user_id":6988013,"co_author_invite_id":null,"email":"p***o@gmail.com","affiliation":"Monterey Institute of International Studies","display_order":1,"name":"Jacob Adams","title":"Sonority Distance and Similarity Avoidance Effects in Moroccan 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href="https://www.academia.edu/5914716/Labialization_and_Palatalization_in_Judeo_Spanish_Phonology"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Labialization and Palatalization in Judeo-Spanish Phonology" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/32895095/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/5914716/Labialization_and_Palatalization_in_Judeo_Spanish_Phonology">Labialization and Palatalization in Judeo-Spanish Phonology</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>In Jason Smith and Tabea Ihsane (eds.), Romance Linguistics 2012. Selected papers from the 42nd Linguistic Symposium on Romance Languages (LSRL), Cedar City, Utah, 20-22 April 2012, 63-83. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins</span><span>, 2015</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Judeo-Spanish (JS) presents a number of phonological processes involving secondary articulations....</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Judeo-Spanish (JS) presents a number of phonological processes involving secondary articulations. This paper establishes novel descriptive generalizations based on labialization and palatalization phenomena across different JS dialects. I show how these generalizations are part of a broader cross-linguistic typology of secondary articulation patterns, which would remain incomplete on the basis of non-Sephardic Spanish alone. I propose an analysis in Optimality Theory (OT) that accounts for this variation using the same universal constraints that are active in languages beyond Ibero-Romance. This paper demonstrates the utility of OT as an analytical framework for doing JS phonology and in turn highlights the importance of JS to phonological theory by bringing new generalizations and data to bear on the analysis of secondary articulations.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="428ba082c3d57f4204864e0f36d7fbe0" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:32895095,&quot;asset_id&quot;:5914716,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/32895095/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="5914716"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="5914716"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 5914716; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=5914716]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=5914716]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 5914716; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='5914716']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 5914716, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "428ba082c3d57f4204864e0f36d7fbe0" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=5914716]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":5914716,"title":"Labialization and Palatalization in Judeo-Spanish Phonology","translated_title":"","metadata":{"doi":"10.1075/rllt.7.06bra","abstract":"Judeo-Spanish (JS) presents a number of phonological processes involving secondary articulations. This paper establishes novel descriptive generalizations based on labialization and palatalization phenomena across different JS dialects. I show how these generalizations are part of a broader cross-linguistic typology of secondary articulation patterns, which would remain incomplete on the basis of non-Sephardic Spanish alone. I propose an analysis in Optimality Theory (OT) that accounts for this variation using the same universal constraints that are active in languages beyond Ibero-Romance. This paper demonstrates the utility of OT as an analytical framework for doing JS phonology and in turn highlights the importance of JS to phonological theory by bringing new generalizations and data to bear on the analysis of secondary articulations.","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2015,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"In Jason Smith and Tabea Ihsane (eds.), Romance Linguistics 2012. Selected papers from the 42nd Linguistic Symposium on Romance Languages (LSRL), Cedar City, Utah, 20-22 April 2012, 63-83. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins"},"translated_abstract":"Judeo-Spanish (JS) presents a number of phonological processes involving secondary articulations. This paper establishes novel descriptive generalizations based on labialization and palatalization phenomena across different JS dialects. I show how these generalizations are part of a broader cross-linguistic typology of secondary articulation patterns, which would remain incomplete on the basis of non-Sephardic Spanish alone. I propose an analysis in Optimality Theory (OT) that accounts for this variation using the same universal constraints that are active in languages beyond Ibero-Romance. 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$(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="7095900"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/7095900/Optimality_Theory_and_Spanish_Phonology"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Optimality Theory and Spanish Phonology" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/33740850/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/7095900/Optimality_Theory_and_Spanish_Phonology">Optimality Theory and Spanish Phonology</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Language and Linguistics Compass</span><span>, 2014</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">This article surveys research in Spanish phonology from the perspective of Optimality Theory, a f...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">This article surveys research in Spanish phonology from the perspective of Optimality Theory, a formal linguistic framework based on ranked and violable constraints. Theoretical insights from OT enrich our understanding of Spanish phonology, and Spanish data also figure prominently in the latest theoretical developments within OT. The article concludes with areas for ongoing research and suggestions for further reading on OT in Spanish phonology.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="3bf68ea65c6e3b35d75e28658379d9f8" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:33740850,&quot;asset_id&quot;:7095900,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/33740850/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="7095900"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="7095900"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 7095900; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=7095900]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=7095900]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 7095900; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='7095900']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 7095900, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "3bf68ea65c6e3b35d75e28658379d9f8" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=7095900]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":7095900,"title":"Optimality Theory and Spanish Phonology","translated_title":"","metadata":{"doi":"10.1111/lnc3.12065","issue":"2","volume":"8","abstract":"This article surveys research in Spanish phonology from the perspective of Optimality Theory, a formal linguistic framework based on ranked and violable constraints. 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Bradley (eds.), Fonología generativa contemporánea de la lengua española (2a edición), 319-367. Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press</span><span>, 2014</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="38470832"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="38470832"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 38470832; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=38470832]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=38470832]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 38470832; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='38470832']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 38470832, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=38470832]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":38470832,"title":"Fonología de laboratorio","translated_title":"","metadata":{"publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2014,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"In Rafael Núñez Cedeño, Sonia Colina and Travis G. 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This study presents a spectrographic analysis of syllable-initial rhotics as produced by ten speakers of Veracruz Mexican Spanish in a guided, semi-spontaneous speech task. Trills that show a reduction in the degree of lingual trilling usually contain an approximant phase following one or two lingual contacts, which we represent as [ɾɹ] or [rɹ] in narrow transcription. Intervocalic taps show both reduction and elision, but those with a measurable contact are short enough to maintain an acoustic difference with the longer allophones of /r/. Taken with recent studies of rhotics in Dominican Spanish, these findings suggest that the contrast between /r/ and /ɾ/ can be maintained in terms of overall segmental duration even when there is no difference in the number of lingual contacts.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="47cb9d0f87e445616157a5a1bae535c5" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:33740878,&quot;asset_id&quot;:7095930,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/33740878/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="7095930"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="7095930"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 7095930; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=7095930]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=7095930]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 7095930; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='7095930']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 7095930, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "47cb9d0f87e445616157a5a1bae535c5" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=7095930]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":7095930,"title":"Rhotic Variation and Contrast in Veracruz Mexican Spanish","translated_title":"","metadata":{"issue":"1","volume":"21","abstract":"Phonetic studies of Spanish rhotics report a wide range of allophonic variants of the syllable-initial trill /r/, which raises the question of whether the intervocalic contrast between /r/ and the tap /ɾ/ has been neutralized in many dialects. 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","page_numbers":"43-74","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2012,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Estudios de fonética experimental"},"translated_abstract":"Phonetic studies of Spanish rhotics report a wide range of allophonic variants of the syllable-initial trill /r/, which raises the question of whether the intervocalic contrast between /r/ and the tap /ɾ/ has been neutralized in many dialects. This study presents a spectrographic analysis of syllable-initial rhotics as produced by ten speakers of Veracruz Mexican Spanish in a guided, semi-spontaneous speech task. Trills that show a reduction in the degree of lingual trilling usually contain an approximant phase following one or two lingual contacts, which we represent as [ɾɹ] or [rɹ] in narrow transcription. Intervocalic taps show both reduction and elision, but those with a measurable contact are short enough to maintain an acoustic difference with the longer allophones of /r/. Taken with recent studies of rhotics in Dominican Spanish, these findings suggest that the contrast between /r/ and /ɾ/ can be maintained in terms of overall segmental duration even when there is no difference in the number of lingual contacts. 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Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins</span><span>, 2011</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">This paper surveys the distribution of mid front vowels before rhotics in five different varietie...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">This paper surveys the distribution of mid front vowels before rhotics in five different varieties of Ibero-Romance and identifies typological patterns of vowel lowering. An analysis is proposed in Optimality Theory that employs a fixed ranking of phonetically grounded markedness constraints against closed mid front /e/ in different pre-rhotic contexts, organized in an implicational hierarchy. Faithfulness constraints on vowel place features interact with this ranking to generate a factorial typology of /e/-lowering that matches the distribution observed in the data and makes predictions about possible and impossible languages. The paper also discusses theoretical implications for the status of intervocalic trills in Ibero-Romance as singleton versus geminate segments.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="1e78299c8c3e64f882b5a53f3ad52b86" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:58536170,&quot;asset_id&quot;:38470859,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/58536170/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="38470859"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="38470859"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 38470859; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=38470859]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=38470859]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 38470859; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='38470859']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 38470859, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "1e78299c8c3e64f882b5a53f3ad52b86" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=38470859]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":38470859,"title":"Mid Front Vowel Lowering before Rhotics in Ibero-Romance","translated_title":"","metadata":{"doi":"10.1075/cilt.318.05bra","abstract":"This paper surveys the distribution of mid front vowels before rhotics in five different varieties of Ibero-Romance and identifies typological patterns of vowel lowering. An analysis is proposed in Optimality Theory that employs a fixed ranking of phonetically grounded markedness constraints against closed mid front /e/ in different pre-rhotic contexts, organized in an implicational hierarchy. Faithfulness constraints on vowel place features interact with this ranking to generate a factorial typology of /e/-lowering that matches the distribution observed in the data and makes predictions about possible and impossible languages. The paper also discusses theoretical implications for the status of intervocalic trills in Ibero-Romance as singleton versus geminate segments.","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2011,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"In Julia Herschensohn (ed.), Romance Linguistics 2010: Selected Papers from the 40th Linguistic Symposium on Romance Languages, 63-78. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins"},"translated_abstract":"This paper surveys the distribution of mid front vowels before rhotics in five different varieties of Ibero-Romance and identifies typological patterns of vowel lowering. An analysis is proposed in Optimality Theory that employs a fixed ranking of phonetically grounded markedness constraints against closed mid front /e/ in different pre-rhotic contexts, organized in an implicational hierarchy. Faithfulness constraints on vowel place features interact with this ranking to generate a factorial typology of /e/-lowering that matches the distribution observed in the data and makes predictions about possible and impossible languages. The paper also discusses theoretical implications for the status of intervocalic trills in Ibero-Romance as singleton versus geminate segments.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/38470859/Mid_Front_Vowel_Lowering_before_Rhotics_in_Ibero_Romance","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2019-03-02T22:17:19.046-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":8774974,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":58536170,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/58536170/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Bradley_2011_Mid_Front_Vowel_Lowering_before_Rhotics_in_Ibero-Romance.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/58536170/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Mid_Front_Vowel_Lowering_before_Rhotics.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/58536170/Bradley_2011_Mid_Front_Vowel_Lowering_before_Rhotics_in_Ibero-Romance-libre.pdf?1551602392=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DMid_Front_Vowel_Lowering_before_Rhotics.pdf\u0026Expires=1732452381\u0026Signature=Dj~0mbMKMUPFwz2pcwSh-p9disbOORfYJuHtCugSSc-IpK26uaOTrOybWKvkwmGVOm8Cln~gz9RaTaPZsw6UJhQzT4~rVduzyglWzGPSmg-OTuJtab-114BMLc4K9PevYDSKK8pGIAusaT0kGs9YIvcvLlb077iMxNwkVjGREAozpWQx0SLzVnn7oox9Xk2hx-Y2fNMMFl6kE6EiA7WZp9qGbPMyWLZjYzqdKtwsZsoZOPqDvBO70Ux1jIIFM9rfMckXYLP0tqqqX~SIW1ddJQL-l1HlfMbj~F6NITRZ0mUZ6pIzeueXCvoyG46w72BiBpBi3O1hZxSNdy2t37itvA__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Mid_Front_Vowel_Lowering_before_Rhotics_in_Ibero_Romance","translated_slug":"","page_count":16,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","owner":{"id":8774974,"first_name":"Travis","middle_initials":"G","last_name":"Bradley","page_name":"TravisBradley","domain_name":"ucdavis","created_at":"2014-02-01T16:29:50.303-08:00","display_name":"Travis G Bradley","url":"https://ucdavis.academia.edu/TravisBradley"},"attachments":[{"id":58536170,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/58536170/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Bradley_2011_Mid_Front_Vowel_Lowering_before_Rhotics_in_Ibero-Romance.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/58536170/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Mid_Front_Vowel_Lowering_before_Rhotics.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/58536170/Bradley_2011_Mid_Front_Vowel_Lowering_before_Rhotics_in_Ibero-Romance-libre.pdf?1551602392=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DMid_Front_Vowel_Lowering_before_Rhotics.pdf\u0026Expires=1732452381\u0026Signature=Dj~0mbMKMUPFwz2pcwSh-p9disbOORfYJuHtCugSSc-IpK26uaOTrOybWKvkwmGVOm8Cln~gz9RaTaPZsw6UJhQzT4~rVduzyglWzGPSmg-OTuJtab-114BMLc4K9PevYDSKK8pGIAusaT0kGs9YIvcvLlb077iMxNwkVjGREAozpWQx0SLzVnn7oox9Xk2hx-Y2fNMMFl6kE6EiA7WZp9qGbPMyWLZjYzqdKtwsZsoZOPqDvBO70Ux1jIIFM9rfMckXYLP0tqqqX~SIW1ddJQL-l1HlfMbj~F6NITRZ0mUZ6pIzeueXCvoyG46w72BiBpBi3O1hZxSNdy2t37itvA__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":1239,"name":"Phonology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Phonology"},{"id":16618,"name":"Optimality Theory","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Optimality_Theory"},{"id":29859,"name":"Romance Linguistics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Romance_Linguistics"},{"id":74167,"name":"Rhotics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Rhotics"}],"urls":[{"id":8710438,"url":"http://benjamins.com/catalog/cilt.318.05bra"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="38471266"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/38471266/The_Phonology_Morphology_Interface_in_Judeo_Spanish_Diminutive_Formation_A_Lexical_Ordering_and_Subcategorization_Approach"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of The Phonology-Morphology Interface in Judeo-Spanish Diminutive Formation: A Lexical Ordering and Subcategorization Approach" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/95424846/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/38471266/The_Phonology_Morphology_Interface_in_Judeo_Spanish_Diminutive_Formation_A_Lexical_Ordering_and_Subcategorization_Approach">The Phonology-Morphology Interface in Judeo-Spanish Diminutive Formation: A Lexical Ordering and Subcategorization Approach</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>With Jason Smith. Studies in Hispanic and Lusophone Linguistics</span><span>, 2011</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">In this article we examine diminutive formation in Judeo-Spanish, which has not been treated befo...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">In this article we examine diminutive formation in Judeo-Spanish, which has not been treated before in the generative literature. The distribution of diminutive suffixes is shown to be predictable based on an interaction of morphological and phonological properties, which is a recognized hallmark of diminutive formation in Spanish more generally. Judeo-Spanish also presents some interesting twists not commonly found in other varieties of Spanish. A formal analysis is developed in Optimality Theory that builds upon recent work on allomorph selection involving lexical ordering and subcategorization. A comparison with previous analyses of other Spanish varieties shows that our approach can account for the behavior of nominal class markers in diminutivization, as well as the alternation of diminutive allomorphs, while avoiding the proliferation of language- and morpheme-specific constraints. Furthermore, our account sheds new light on the moraic status of glides in rising and falling diphthongs and of the trill in word-medial intervocalic position.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="ec429b9883efd4efad22c9a7ffa70b98" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:95424846,&quot;asset_id&quot;:38471266,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/95424846/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="38471266"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="38471266"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 38471266; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=38471266]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=38471266]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 38471266; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='38471266']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 38471266, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "ec429b9883efd4efad22c9a7ffa70b98" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=38471266]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":38471266,"title":"The Phonology-Morphology Interface in Judeo-Spanish Diminutive Formation: A Lexical Ordering and Subcategorization Approach","translated_title":"","metadata":{"doi":"10.1515/shll-2011-1103","issue":"2","volume":"4","abstract":"In this article we examine diminutive formation in Judeo-Spanish, which has not been treated before in the generative literature. The distribution of diminutive suffixes is shown to be predictable based on an interaction of morphological and phonological properties, which is a recognized hallmark of diminutive formation in Spanish more generally. Judeo-Spanish also presents some interesting twists not commonly found in other varieties of Spanish. A formal analysis is developed in Optimality Theory that builds upon recent work on allomorph selection involving lexical ordering and subcategorization. A comparison with previous analyses of other Spanish varieties shows that our approach can account for the behavior of nominal class markers in diminutivization, as well as the alternation of diminutive allomorphs, while avoiding the proliferation of language- and morpheme-specific constraints. Furthermore, our account sheds new light on the moraic status of glides in rising and falling diphthongs and of the trill in word-medial intervocalic position.","page_numbers":"247-300","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2011,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"With Jason Smith. Studies in Hispanic and Lusophone Linguistics"},"translated_abstract":"In this article we examine diminutive formation in Judeo-Spanish, which has not been treated before in the generative literature. The distribution of diminutive suffixes is shown to be predictable based on an interaction of morphological and phonological properties, which is a recognized hallmark of diminutive formation in Spanish more generally. Judeo-Spanish also presents some interesting twists not commonly found in other varieties of Spanish. A formal analysis is developed in Optimality Theory that builds upon recent work on allomorph selection involving lexical ordering and subcategorization. A comparison with previous analyses of other Spanish varieties shows that our approach can account for the behavior of nominal class markers in diminutivization, as well as the alternation of diminutive allomorphs, while avoiding the proliferation of language- and morpheme-specific constraints. Furthermore, our account sheds new light on the moraic status of glides in rising and falling diphthongs and of the trill in word-medial intervocalic position.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/38471266/The_Phonology_Morphology_Interface_in_Judeo_Spanish_Diminutive_Formation_A_Lexical_Ordering_and_Subcategorization_Approach","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2019-03-02T22:38:33.834-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":8774974,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":95424846,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/95424846/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Bradley_and_Smith_2011.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/95424846/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"The_Phonology_Morphology_Interface_in_Ju.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/95424846/Bradley_and_Smith_2011-libre.pdf?1670489658=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DThe_Phonology_Morphology_Interface_in_Ju.pdf\u0026Expires=1732452381\u0026Signature=NM92bprhSMeqJYB4c0QX9e-4OfO5HcJSPTMIpmbucKISA4jk36ahklCjEN77AkwdE2120VXxIGQXKm0lZosbRrOfQW6WXivxpPSg0SRHO0fpn0b~gqDSvqdikxM6FO6II~aXcgAa7TzBmBAD7-NZxCc2DZCnrKbipXQULJXbZbnspzTP9-1zZ0gm7nHapEMsPjKD48mngeOFOnjqydVhKe81MzTskgc7g~9IaYBneM7FgiFT8Z1FljzjNqY9mOFto0GubCJLnNE8RSgOnBcfnfk-PaXNYd5sA0GvCV2uGj6s-obsyIgXbMG2aVq36jOC9G5f3HAQnmR1syKzmBb~hA__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"The_Phonology_Morphology_Interface_in_Judeo_Spanish_Diminutive_Formation_A_Lexical_Ordering_and_Subcategorization_Approach","translated_slug":"","page_count":54,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","owner":{"id":8774974,"first_name":"Travis","middle_initials":"G","last_name":"Bradley","page_name":"TravisBradley","domain_name":"ucdavis","created_at":"2014-02-01T16:29:50.303-08:00","display_name":"Travis G Bradley","url":"https://ucdavis.academia.edu/TravisBradley"},"attachments":[{"id":95424846,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/95424846/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Bradley_and_Smith_2011.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/95424846/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"The_Phonology_Morphology_Interface_in_Ju.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/95424846/Bradley_and_Smith_2011-libre.pdf?1670489658=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DThe_Phonology_Morphology_Interface_in_Ju.pdf\u0026Expires=1732452381\u0026Signature=NM92bprhSMeqJYB4c0QX9e-4OfO5HcJSPTMIpmbucKISA4jk36ahklCjEN77AkwdE2120VXxIGQXKm0lZosbRrOfQW6WXivxpPSg0SRHO0fpn0b~gqDSvqdikxM6FO6II~aXcgAa7TzBmBAD7-NZxCc2DZCnrKbipXQULJXbZbnspzTP9-1zZ0gm7nHapEMsPjKD48mngeOFOnjqydVhKe81MzTskgc7g~9IaYBneM7FgiFT8Z1FljzjNqY9mOFto0GubCJLnNE8RSgOnBcfnfk-PaXNYd5sA0GvCV2uGj6s-obsyIgXbMG2aVq36jOC9G5f3HAQnmR1syKzmBb~hA__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":1239,"name":"Phonology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Phonology"},{"id":12492,"name":"Spanish Linguistics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Spanish_Linguistics"},{"id":16618,"name":"Optimality Theory","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Optimality_Theory"},{"id":316032,"name":"Ladino (Judeo-Spanish) Language and Literature","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Ladino_Judeo-Spanish_Language_and_Literature"}],"urls":[{"id":8710451,"url":"http://www.degruyter.com/view/j/shll.2011.4.issue-2/shll-2011-1103/shll-2011-1103.xml"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="7095836"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/7095836/On_the_Syllabificaion_of_Prevocalic_w_in_Judeo_Spanish"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of On the Syllabificaion of Prevocalic /w/ in Judeo-Spanish" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/33740810/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/7095836/On_the_Syllabificaion_of_Prevocalic_w_in_Judeo_Spanish">On the Syllabificaion of Prevocalic /w/ in Judeo-Spanish</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>In Pascual J. Masullo, Erin O&#39;Rourke and Chia-Hui Huang (eds.), Romance Linguistics 2007: Selected Papers from the 37th Linguistic Symposium on Romance Languages, 51-67. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins</span><span>, 2009</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Spanish prevocalic glides belong to the syllable nucleus except when no less sonorous segment is ...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Spanish prevocalic glides belong to the syllable nucleus except when no less sonorous segment is available to serve as onset (Harris 1983, Harris &amp; Kaisse 1999, Hualde 1989, 1991). Phonological innovations in a particular group of Judeo-Spanish dialects point to a novel generalization regarding the labiovelar glide, namely that /w/ is realized as secondary labialization on a preceding consonant. Evidence supporting this structural innovation comes from an asymmetry in the distribution of labialization. In these dialects, prevocalic /w/ strengthens to a labialized dorsal obstruent in syllable-initial position (ɡʷéso ‘bone’) but is realized as a secondary articulation on a preceding labial (pʷéðe ‘can’) or dorsal (kʷé.ðɾa ‘rope’). Labialized coronals are disallowed and show several historical reflexes depending on the coronal’s manner of articulation: nasal place assimilation (nwe&gt;mʷe), medial vowel epenthesis (twe&gt;tuɣʷe), and prothesis (swe&gt;esʍʷe). These innovations are analyzed in Optimality Theory in terms of interacting markedness and faithfulness constraints. The proposed account has implications for the issue of possible repair strategies, a.k.a. the “too-many-solutions” problem.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="56d97871a796e7aea9f7bd796359dac0" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:33740810,&quot;asset_id&quot;:7095836,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/33740810/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="7095836"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="7095836"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 7095836; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=7095836]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=7095836]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 7095836; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='7095836']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 7095836, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "56d97871a796e7aea9f7bd796359dac0" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=7095836]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":7095836,"title":"On the Syllabificaion of Prevocalic /w/ in Judeo-Spanish","translated_title":"","metadata":{"doi":"10.1075/cilt.304.05bra","abstract":"Spanish prevocalic glides belong to the syllable nucleus except when no less sonorous segment is available to serve as onset (Harris 1983, Harris \u0026 Kaisse 1999, Hualde 1989, 1991). Phonological innovations in a particular group of Judeo-Spanish dialects point to a novel generalization regarding the labiovelar glide, namely that /w/ is realized as secondary labialization on a preceding consonant. Evidence supporting this structural innovation comes from an asymmetry in the distribution of labialization. In these dialects, prevocalic /w/ strengthens to a labialized dorsal obstruent in syllable-initial position (ɡʷéso ‘bone’) but is realized as a secondary articulation on a preceding labial (pʷéðe ‘can’) or dorsal (kʷé.ðɾa ‘rope’). Labialized coronals are disallowed and show several historical reflexes depending on the coronal’s manner of articulation: nasal place assimilation (nwe\u003emʷe), medial vowel epenthesis (twe\u003etuɣʷe), and prothesis (swe\u003eesʍʷe). These innovations are analyzed in Optimality Theory in terms of interacting markedness and faithfulness constraints. The proposed account has implications for the issue of possible repair strategies, a.k.a. the “too-many-solutions” problem. ","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2009,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"In Pascual J. Masullo, Erin O'Rourke and Chia-Hui Huang (eds.), Romance Linguistics 2007: Selected Papers from the 37th Linguistic Symposium on Romance Languages, 51-67. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins"},"translated_abstract":"Spanish prevocalic glides belong to the syllable nucleus except when no less sonorous segment is available to serve as onset (Harris 1983, Harris \u0026 Kaisse 1999, Hualde 1989, 1991). Phonological innovations in a particular group of Judeo-Spanish dialects point to a novel generalization regarding the labiovelar glide, namely that /w/ is realized as secondary labialization on a preceding consonant. Evidence supporting this structural innovation comes from an asymmetry in the distribution of labialization. In these dialects, prevocalic /w/ strengthens to a labialized dorsal obstruent in syllable-initial position (ɡʷéso ‘bone’) but is realized as a secondary articulation on a preceding labial (pʷéðe ‘can’) or dorsal (kʷé.ðɾa ‘rope’). Labialized coronals are disallowed and show several historical reflexes depending on the coronal’s manner of articulation: nasal place assimilation (nwe\u003emʷe), medial vowel epenthesis (twe\u003etuɣʷe), and prothesis (swe\u003eesʍʷe). These innovations are analyzed in Optimality Theory in terms of interacting markedness and faithfulness constraints. The proposed account has implications for the issue of possible repair strategies, a.k.a. the “too-many-solutions” problem. ","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/7095836/On_the_Syllabificaion_of_Prevocalic_w_in_Judeo_Spanish","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2014-05-19T16:57:57.666-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":8774974,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":33740810,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/33740810/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"bradley_jsprevocalicw.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/33740810/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"On_the_Syllabificaion_of_Prevocalic_w_in.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/33740810/bradley_jsprevocalicw-libre.pdf?1400544006=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DOn_the_Syllabificaion_of_Prevocalic_w_in.pdf\u0026Expires=1732452381\u0026Signature=Kd5GK0a5plxdYM4~qYKLmTO8AE5EwzuS0NbXhj4CxxFab1zp~G4KODmvY3PMn7Logb0HmJDEQCQHULE6zjBKvt5Zg3noncdvguEE~hsXCogZQ3n3y2Cu0pfsWaDWQzX9NWtioe558QfAmhT3TW7QggtVCEcIML163pomh7u6kLxkkfXxmHkmjIz4WZJGUJnQXAZ60pWVAsVIqbLsyWvauCsm46vFaTfDb6xeKCsN1ZOAvSuPGEQR7NQX~NLr2mhARPrYOJIBKlhZDFxmQUMQ8Q6Ds-2a3DORaE~TBPMznZEatap49xEkKMPEB-q0LqJvEsA5T54vhjAcHDIRgDmpig__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"On_the_Syllabificaion_of_Prevocalic_w_in_Judeo_Spanish","translated_slug":"","page_count":15,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","owner":{"id":8774974,"first_name":"Travis","middle_initials":"G","last_name":"Bradley","page_name":"TravisBradley","domain_name":"ucdavis","created_at":"2014-02-01T16:29:50.303-08:00","display_name":"Travis G Bradley","url":"https://ucdavis.academia.edu/TravisBradley"},"attachments":[{"id":33740810,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/33740810/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"bradley_jsprevocalicw.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/33740810/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"On_the_Syllabificaion_of_Prevocalic_w_in.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/33740810/bradley_jsprevocalicw-libre.pdf?1400544006=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DOn_the_Syllabificaion_of_Prevocalic_w_in.pdf\u0026Expires=1732452381\u0026Signature=Kd5GK0a5plxdYM4~qYKLmTO8AE5EwzuS0NbXhj4CxxFab1zp~G4KODmvY3PMn7Logb0HmJDEQCQHULE6zjBKvt5Zg3noncdvguEE~hsXCogZQ3n3y2Cu0pfsWaDWQzX9NWtioe558QfAmhT3TW7QggtVCEcIML163pomh7u6kLxkkfXxmHkmjIz4WZJGUJnQXAZ60pWVAsVIqbLsyWvauCsm46vFaTfDb6xeKCsN1ZOAvSuPGEQR7NQX~NLr2mhARPrYOJIBKlhZDFxmQUMQ8Q6Ds-2a3DORaE~TBPMznZEatap49xEkKMPEB-q0LqJvEsA5T54vhjAcHDIRgDmpig__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":16618,"name":"Optimality Theory","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Optimality_Theory"},{"id":60338,"name":"Phonetics and Phonology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Phonetics_and_Phonology"},{"id":316032,"name":"Ladino (Judeo-Spanish) Language and Literature","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Ladino_Judeo-Spanish_Language_and_Literature"}],"urls":[{"id":8710410,"url":"http://benjamins.com/catalog/cilt.304.05bra"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="5367961"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/5367961/2008_Contrast_Maintenance_of_Taps_and_Trills_in_Dominican_Spanish_Data_and_Analysis"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of 2008. Contrast Maintenance of Taps and Trills in Dominican Spanish: Data and Analysis" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/32515100/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/5367961/2008_Contrast_Maintenance_of_Taps_and_Trills_in_Dominican_Spanish_Data_and_Analysis">2008. Contrast Maintenance of Taps and Trills in Dominican Spanish: Data and Analysis</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--coauthors"><span>by </span><span><a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://ucdavis.academia.edu/TravisBradley">Travis G Bradley</a> and <a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://indiana.academia.edu/ErikWillis">Erik W Willis</a></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="945bd8fd27484ea4c3a4794abcfe1eb1" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:32515100,&quot;asset_id&quot;:5367961,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/32515100/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="5367961"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="5367961"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 5367961; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=5367961]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=5367961]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 5367961; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='5367961']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 5367961, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "945bd8fd27484ea4c3a4794abcfe1eb1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=5367961]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":5367961,"title":"2008. Contrast Maintenance of Taps and Trills in Dominican Spanish: Data and Analysis","translated_title":"","metadata":{"grobid_abstract":"as well as the audience members of the 3 rd Conference on Laboratory Approaches to Spanish Phonology. The current paper has also benefited from the comments and questions of two anonymous reviewers. are used with permission from Cambridge University Press. We are responsible for any shortcomings in the present work. 1 This claim by Hammond goes against multiple laboratory examinations of the trill in Peninsular Spanish such as","grobid_abstract_attachment_id":32515100},"translated_abstract":null,"internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/5367961/2008_Contrast_Maintenance_of_Taps_and_Trills_in_Dominican_Spanish_Data_and_Analysis","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2013-12-09T13:14:56.165-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":7465427,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[{"id":15448098,"work_id":5367961,"tagging_user_id":7465427,"tagged_user_id":8774974,"co_author_invite_id":null,"email":"t***y@gmail.com","affiliation":"University of California, Davis","display_order":0,"name":"Travis G Bradley","title":"2008. Contrast Maintenance of Taps and Trills in Dominican Spanish: Data and Analysis"}],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":32515100,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/32515100/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"paper1716.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/32515100/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"2008_Contrast_Maintenance_of_Taps_and_Tr.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/32515100/paper1716-libre.pdf?1391126088=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3D2008_Contrast_Maintenance_of_Taps_and_Tr.pdf\u0026Expires=1732452381\u0026Signature=AipPyiHhlRcrTjbcQRwT9qM7rcBui1zJkRhhjZ~nZCEn~Fe5~KiRjJplNrDSdRxrM1FPauPUejvtX0feakxGVHmm5YiHgjiW2DFsR4nBNGN7krivZ5AUVFe9a3~P6Ay84ib53IPVObGgW8y92f9ZHSQ-Xp-v1lhlLSEpV-13tc1TXNUdAR6HxZhptWQSAXkNeHrp6BWRBDCwd6PcJ42mDWnaa2fljTfA-fc-zroAj~FUPFxUEUIhDHCAv5ZHCGfQ0hBNr-xD8E389cQIgE~gKgUAJ75jFQgaDfHXHTpra62I5yAhv-CHPRsmbEz93zy4aC81ezP~Uwa51Pr4mxparw__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"2008_Contrast_Maintenance_of_Taps_and_Trills_in_Dominican_Spanish_Data_and_Analysis","translated_slug":"","page_count":15,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","owner":{"id":7465427,"first_name":"Erik","middle_initials":"W","last_name":"Willis","page_name":"ErikWillis","domain_name":"indiana","created_at":"2013-12-09T13:12:09.622-08:00","display_name":"Erik W Willis","url":"https://indiana.academia.edu/ErikWillis"},"attachments":[{"id":32515100,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/32515100/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"paper1716.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/32515100/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"2008_Contrast_Maintenance_of_Taps_and_Tr.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/32515100/paper1716-libre.pdf?1391126088=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3D2008_Contrast_Maintenance_of_Taps_and_Tr.pdf\u0026Expires=1732452381\u0026Signature=AipPyiHhlRcrTjbcQRwT9qM7rcBui1zJkRhhjZ~nZCEn~Fe5~KiRjJplNrDSdRxrM1FPauPUejvtX0feakxGVHmm5YiHgjiW2DFsR4nBNGN7krivZ5AUVFe9a3~P6Ay84ib53IPVObGgW8y92f9ZHSQ-Xp-v1lhlLSEpV-13tc1TXNUdAR6HxZhptWQSAXkNeHrp6BWRBDCwd6PcJ42mDWnaa2fljTfA-fc-zroAj~FUPFxUEUIhDHCAv5ZHCGfQ0hBNr-xD8E389cQIgE~gKgUAJ75jFQgaDfHXHTpra62I5yAhv-CHPRsmbEz93zy4aC81ezP~Uwa51Pr4mxparw__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[],"urls":[{"id":2066063,"url":"http://www.lingref.com/cpp/lasp/3/paper1716.pdf"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="5914727"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/5914727/Constraints_on_the_metathesis_of_sonorant_consonants_in_Judeo_Spanish"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Constraints on the metathesis of sonorant consonants in Judeo-Spanish" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/32895113/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/5914727/Constraints_on_the_metathesis_of_sonorant_consonants_in_Judeo_Spanish">Constraints on the metathesis of sonorant consonants in Judeo-Spanish</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Probus</span><span>, 2007</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Judeo-Spanish denotes those varieties of Spanish preserved by the Sephardic Jews who were expelle...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Judeo-Spanish denotes those varieties of Spanish preserved by the Sephardic Jews who were expelled from Spain in 1492 and have emigrated throughout Europe, North Africa, the Middle East, and the United States. This paper analyzes several types of sonorant consonant metathesis in Judeo-Spanish within the framework of Optimality Theory. Following Holt&#39;s (2004) account of Old Spanish, local metathesis of dl, dn, and nr clusters is analyzed as a repair strategy for bad syllable contact. A novel analysis is proposed in which nasal place assimilation and positional faithfulness constraints account for the failure of dm metathesis in morphologically derived environments. Judeo-Spanish also has two types of innovative rhotic metathesis that cannot be explained in terms of syllable contact. The rd &gt; dr shift is analyzed as an effect of the Obligatory Contour Principle, whereby adjacent segments identical in place, manner, and voicing specifications are prohibited. The second type involves the displacement of r toward the left edge of a word, also frequently attested in popular Modern Spanish. A comprehensive account of rhotic metathesis is developed, following recent work on position-specific constraint evaluation (Riggle and Wilson 2005) and segmental adjacency constraints (Carpenter 2002).</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="1354cc38c99e330d067eb790064c850d" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:32895113,&quot;asset_id&quot;:5914727,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/32895113/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="5914727"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="5914727"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 5914727; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=5914727]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=5914727]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 5914727; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='5914727']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 5914727, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "1354cc38c99e330d067eb790064c850d" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=5914727]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":5914727,"title":"Constraints on the metathesis of sonorant consonants in Judeo-Spanish","translated_title":"","metadata":{"doi":"10.1515/PROBUS.2007.006","issue":"2","volume":"19","abstract":"Judeo-Spanish denotes those varieties of Spanish preserved by the Sephardic Jews who were expelled from Spain in 1492 and have emigrated throughout Europe, North Africa, the Middle East, and the United States. This paper analyzes several types of sonorant consonant metathesis in Judeo-Spanish within the framework of Optimality Theory. Following Holt's (2004) account of Old Spanish, local metathesis of dl, dn, and nr clusters is analyzed as a repair strategy for bad syllable contact. A novel analysis is proposed in which nasal place assimilation and positional faithfulness constraints account for the failure of dm metathesis in morphologically derived environments. Judeo-Spanish also has two types of innovative rhotic metathesis that cannot be explained in terms of syllable contact. The rd \u003e dr shift is analyzed as an effect of the Obligatory Contour Principle, whereby adjacent segments identical in place, manner, and voicing specifications are prohibited. The second type involves the displacement of r toward the left edge of a word, also frequently attested in popular Modern Spanish. 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A novel analysis is proposed in which nasal place assimilation and positional faithfulness constraints account for the failure of dm metathesis in morphologically derived environments. Judeo-Spanish also has two types of innovative rhotic metathesis that cannot be explained in terms of syllable contact. The rd \u003e dr shift is analyzed as an effect of the Obligatory Contour Principle, whereby adjacent segments identical in place, manner, and voicing specifications are prohibited. The second type involves the displacement of r toward the left edge of a word, also frequently attested in popular Modern Spanish. 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$(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="38471482"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/38471482/Morphological_derived_environment_effects_in_gestural_coordination_A_case_study_of_Norwegian_clusters"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Morphological derived-environment effects in gestural coordination: A case study of Norwegian clusters" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/38471482/Morphological_derived_environment_effects_in_gestural_coordination_A_case_study_of_Norwegian_clusters">Morphological derived-environment effects in gestural coordination: A case study of Norwegian clusters</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Lingua</span><span>, 2007</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">This paper examines morphophonological alternations involving apicoalveolar tap-consonant cluster...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">This paper examines morphophonological alternations involving apicoalveolar tap-consonant clusters in Urban East Norwegian from the framework of gestural Optimality Theory. Articulatory Phonology provides an insightful explanation of patterns of vowel intrusion, coalescence, and rhotic deletion in terms of the temporal coordination of consonantal gestures, which interacts with both prosodic and morphological structure. An alignment-based account of derived-environment effects is proposed in which complete overlap in rhotic-consonant clusters is blocked within morphemes but not across morpheme or word boundaries. Alignment constraints on gestural coordination also play a role in phonologically conditioned allomorphy. The gestural analysis is contrasted with alternative Optimality-theoretic accounts. Furthermore, it is argued that models of the phonetics–phonology interface which view timing as a low-level detail of phonetic implementation incorrectly predict that input morphological structure should have no effect on gestural coordination. The patterning of rhotic-consonant clusters in Norwegian is consistent with a model that includes gestural representations and constraints directly in the phonological grammar, where underlying morphological structure is still visible. On the assumption that Universal Grammar lacks faithfulness constraints on input timing, the phonology is free to include non-contrastive phonetic detail such as intersegmental gestural coordination without the danger of overgenerating impossible contrasts.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="38471482"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="38471482"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 38471482; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=38471482]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=38471482]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 38471482; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='38471482']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 38471482, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=38471482]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":38471482,"title":"Morphological derived-environment effects in gestural coordination: A case study of Norwegian clusters","translated_title":"","metadata":{"doi":"10.1016/j.lingua.2006.05.004","issue":"6","volume":"117","abstract":"This paper examines morphophonological alternations involving apicoalveolar tap-consonant clusters in Urban East Norwegian from the framework of gestural Optimality Theory. Articulatory Phonology provides an insightful explanation of patterns of vowel intrusion, coalescence, and rhotic deletion in terms of the temporal coordination of consonantal gestures, which interacts with both prosodic and morphological structure. An alignment-based account of derived-environment effects is proposed in which complete overlap in rhotic-consonant clusters is blocked within morphemes but not across morpheme or word boundaries. Alignment constraints on gestural coordination also play a role in phonologically conditioned allomorphy. The gestural analysis is contrasted with alternative Optimality-theoretic accounts. Furthermore, it is argued that models of the phonetics–phonology interface which view timing as a low-level detail of phonetic implementation incorrectly predict that input morphological structure should have no effect on gestural coordination. The patterning of rhotic-consonant clusters in Norwegian is consistent with a model that includes gestural representations and constraints directly in the phonological grammar, where underlying morphological structure is still visible. On the assumption that Universal Grammar lacks faithfulness constraints on input timing, the phonology is free to include non-contrastive phonetic detail such as intersegmental gestural coordination without the danger of overgenerating impossible contrasts.\n\n","page_numbers":"950-985","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2007,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Lingua"},"translated_abstract":"This paper examines morphophonological alternations involving apicoalveolar tap-consonant clusters in Urban East Norwegian from the framework of gestural Optimality Theory. Articulatory Phonology provides an insightful explanation of patterns of vowel intrusion, coalescence, and rhotic deletion in terms of the temporal coordination of consonantal gestures, which interacts with both prosodic and morphological structure. An alignment-based account of derived-environment effects is proposed in which complete overlap in rhotic-consonant clusters is blocked within morphemes but not across morpheme or word boundaries. Alignment constraints on gestural coordination also play a role in phonologically conditioned allomorphy. The gestural analysis is contrasted with alternative Optimality-theoretic accounts. Furthermore, it is argued that models of the phonetics–phonology interface which view timing as a low-level detail of phonetic implementation incorrectly predict that input morphological structure should have no effect on gestural coordination. The patterning of rhotic-consonant clusters in Norwegian is consistent with a model that includes gestural representations and constraints directly in the phonological grammar, where underlying morphological structure is still visible. On the assumption that Universal Grammar lacks faithfulness constraints on input timing, the phonology is free to include non-contrastive phonetic detail such as intersegmental gestural coordination without the danger of overgenerating impossible contrasts.\n\n","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/38471482/Morphological_derived_environment_effects_in_gestural_coordination_A_case_study_of_Norwegian_clusters","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2019-03-02T22:46:50.842-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":8774974,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"Morphological_derived_environment_effects_in_gestural_coordination_A_case_study_of_Norwegian_clusters","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","owner":{"id":8774974,"first_name":"Travis","middle_initials":"G","last_name":"Bradley","page_name":"TravisBradley","domain_name":"ucdavis","created_at":"2014-02-01T16:29:50.303-08:00","display_name":"Travis G Bradley","url":"https://ucdavis.academia.edu/TravisBradley"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":1239,"name":"Phonology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Phonology"},{"id":16618,"name":"Optimality Theory","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Optimality_Theory"},{"id":74167,"name":"Rhotics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Rhotics"},{"id":300344,"name":"Norwegian Language","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Norwegian_Language"}],"urls":[{"id":8710453,"url":"http://escholarship.org/uc/item/5mn3w7gz"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="38477468"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/38477468/Prosodically_conditioned_Sibilant_Voicing_in_Balkan_Judeo_Spanish"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Prosodically-conditioned Sibilant Voicing in Balkan Judeo-Spanish" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/58543308/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/38477468/Prosodically_conditioned_Sibilant_Voicing_in_Balkan_Judeo_Spanish">Prosodically-conditioned Sibilant Voicing in Balkan Judeo-Spanish</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>In Erin Bainbridge and Brian Agbayani (eds.), Proceedings of the 34th Western Conference on Linguistics, 48-60. 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$(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="38471492"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/38471492/Contrast_and_Markedness_in_Complex_Onset_Phonotactics"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Contrast and Markedness in Complex Onset Phonotactics" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/58536646/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/38471492/Contrast_and_Markedness_in_Complex_Onset_Phonotactics">Contrast and Markedness in Complex Onset Phonotactics</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Southwest Journal of Linguistics</span><span>, 2006</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">In many languages that permit coronal laterals to follow labial and velar stops in complex onsets...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">In many languages that permit coronal laterals to follow labial and velar stops in complex onsets, sequences of a coronal stop followed by a coronal lateral are prohibited. Standard accounts rule out coronal-lateral clusters as an effect of the Obligatory Contour Principle, but this approach cannot explain languages such as Mong Njua and Katu, which neutralize the coronal-velar place contrast but still allow the coronal-lateral clusters to appear. Recent work in Dispersion Theory (Flemming 1995, 2002, Padgett 2003a,b,c) has argued that Optimality Theory (Prince and Smolensky 1993/2004) must also include systemic constraints that evaluate phonological forms in the context of the larger system of contrasting forms in a language. This paper offers a new Dispersion-theoretic analysis of restrictions on onset clusters involving laterals. Systemic markedness constraints penalize indistinct coronal-velar contrasts in different pre-lateral contexts. Directionality of neutralization is determined by faithfulness constraints on input place, whose ranking can vary across languages and dialects (Hume 2003, Hume and Tserdandelis 2002). The proposed analysis solves problems with earlier accounts and also encompasses typological patterns from over forty languages, including velarization in early Romance sound change and Mexican Spanish loanword adaptations from Nahuatl.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="105dedea549a0bf00c213579b9fe246f" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:58536646,&quot;asset_id&quot;:38471492,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/58536646/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="38471492"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="38471492"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 38471492; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=38471492]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=38471492]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 38471492; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='38471492']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 38471492, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "105dedea549a0bf00c213579b9fe246f" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=38471492]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":38471492,"title":"Contrast and Markedness in Complex Onset Phonotactics","translated_title":"","metadata":{"issue":"1","volume":"25","abstract":"In many languages that permit coronal laterals to follow labial and velar stops in complex onsets, sequences of a coronal stop followed by a coronal lateral are prohibited. 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Recent work in Dispersion Theory (Flemming 1995, 2002, Padgett 2003a,b,c) has argued that Optimality Theory (Prince and Smolensky 1993/2004) must also include systemic constraints that evaluate phonological forms in the context of the larger system of contrasting forms in a language. This paper offers a new Dispersion-theoretic analysis of restrictions on onset clusters involving laterals. Systemic markedness constraints penalize indistinct coronal-velar contrasts in different pre-lateral contexts. Directionality of neutralization is determined by faithfulness constraints on input place, whose ranking can vary across languages and dialects (Hume 2003, Hume and Tserdandelis 2002). The proposed analysis solves problems with earlier accounts and also encompasses typological patterns from over forty languages, including velarization in early Romance sound change and Mexican Spanish loanword adaptations from Nahuatl.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/38471492/Contrast_and_Markedness_in_Complex_Onset_Phonotactics","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2019-03-02T22:53:22.147-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":8774974,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":58536646,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/58536646/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Bradley_2006_Contrast_and_Markedness_in_Complex_Onset_Phonotactics.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/58536646/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Contrast_and_Markedness_in_Complex_Onset.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/58536646/Bradley_2006_Contrast_and_Markedness_in_Complex_Onset_Phonotactics-libre.pdf?1551770294=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DContrast_and_Markedness_in_Complex_Onset.pdf\u0026Expires=1732452381\u0026Signature=VNM1B~gQkEeM6z3yzWnxZsqzvzQYWEtHxQkM-SPG1a9VZeZ4VmlRyMVTm5Za12FeAJWT6P5stUY3dHww6U9yWeCe77TT7zgPeiK7jBSm5eTDT-GkH5WeTnBi22PXbn2GcmnkxomRETWLB-CBGiqFXTYJB3D7L5cJYhRN2dnBM1RbGCjgZz6m5LgPBmdZUCErR54awnHwGcJtYjsnWWYgp5vr-gYHw9zIXj9NnqvYYQ376NsEVam3ThpjebbKjgKN-XDQcYPMjm4K5REHnr6MpVR0hZtORMUET4wB9Jsen1uIxayluWd5XXjmmxv~teCUWfo8BVNZYKS1F7FQTLnYHw__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Contrast_and_Markedness_in_Complex_Onset_Phonotactics","translated_slug":"","page_count":30,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","owner":{"id":8774974,"first_name":"Travis","middle_initials":"G","last_name":"Bradley","page_name":"TravisBradley","domain_name":"ucdavis","created_at":"2014-02-01T16:29:50.303-08:00","display_name":"Travis G Bradley","url":"https://ucdavis.academia.edu/TravisBradley"},"attachments":[{"id":58536646,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/58536646/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Bradley_2006_Contrast_and_Markedness_in_Complex_Onset_Phonotactics.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/58536646/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Contrast_and_Markedness_in_Complex_Onset.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/58536646/Bradley_2006_Contrast_and_Markedness_in_Complex_Onset_Phonotactics-libre.pdf?1551770294=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DContrast_and_Markedness_in_Complex_Onset.pdf\u0026Expires=1732452381\u0026Signature=VNM1B~gQkEeM6z3yzWnxZsqzvzQYWEtHxQkM-SPG1a9VZeZ4VmlRyMVTm5Za12FeAJWT6P5stUY3dHww6U9yWeCe77TT7zgPeiK7jBSm5eTDT-GkH5WeTnBi22PXbn2GcmnkxomRETWLB-CBGiqFXTYJB3D7L5cJYhRN2dnBM1RbGCjgZz6m5LgPBmdZUCErR54awnHwGcJtYjsnWWYgp5vr-gYHw9zIXj9NnqvYYQ376NsEVam3ThpjebbKjgKN-XDQcYPMjm4K5REHnr6MpVR0hZtORMUET4wB9Jsen1uIxayluWd5XXjmmxv~teCUWfo8BVNZYKS1F7FQTLnYHw__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":1239,"name":"Phonology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Phonology"},{"id":12492,"name":"Spanish Linguistics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Spanish_Linguistics"},{"id":16618,"name":"Optimality Theory","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Optimality_Theory"},{"id":29859,"name":"Romance Linguistics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Romance_Linguistics"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> </div><div class="profile--tab_content_container js-tab-pane tab-pane" data-section-id="1117703" id="papers"><div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="104961720"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/104961720/Incomplete_Resyllabification_and_Ambisyllabic_Gestural_Coupling_in_Spanish"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Incomplete Resyllabification and Ambisyllabic Gestural Coupling in Spanish" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/104547841/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/104961720/Incomplete_Resyllabification_and_Ambisyllabic_Gestural_Coupling_in_Spanish">Incomplete Resyllabification and Ambisyllabic Gestural Coupling in Spanish</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--coauthors"><span>by </span><span><a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://ucdavis.academia.edu/TravisBradley">Travis G Bradley</a>, <a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://uwlax.academia.edu/KimberlyMorris">Kimberly Morris</a>, and <a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://uci.academia.edu/LillianJones">Lillian Jones</a></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Loquens</span><span>, 2023</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">In the generative literature, the pattern of coronal fricative lenition found in the traditional ...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">In the generative literature, the pattern of coronal fricative lenition found in the traditional Chinato Spanish dialect is commonly cited as a phonological argument that the resyllabification of word-final prevocalic consonants is complete, in the sense that onsets derived by resyllabification are structurally identical to canonical (word-level) onsets. However, recent acoustic studies of Northern-Central Peninsular Spanish have problematized the completeness of resyllabification with experimental evidence that /s̺ / is shorter and more voiced as a derived onset than as a canonical onset. Using a split-gesture, competitive, coupled oscillator model of the syllable in Articulatory Phonology, which divides consonants into a separate constriction and release gesture, we propose a novel representation of ambisyllabicity that predicts the phonetic behavior of derived onset /s̺ / in Northern-Central Peninsular Spanish. We then show that ambisyllabic coupling permits a simpler phonological analysis of coronal fricative lenition in Chinato Spanish as compared to alternative accounts. Our analysis makes typological predictions that are confirmed by patterns from other contemporary Spanish varieties. Lastly, we examine the consequences of ambisyllabicity for the analysis of Spanish rhotic consonants, which have also been argued to support complete resyllabification. We offer an analysis of rhotics that is entirely compatible with an ambisyllabic representation of incomplete resyllabification.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="0ed0098b10e28201f16150ebb606404d" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:104547841,&quot;asset_id&quot;:104961720,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/104547841/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="104961720"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="104961720"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 104961720; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=104961720]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=104961720]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 104961720; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='104961720']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 104961720, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "0ed0098b10e28201f16150ebb606404d" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=104961720]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":104961720,"title":"Incomplete Resyllabification and Ambisyllabic Gestural Coupling in Spanish","translated_title":"","metadata":{"doi":"10.3989/loquens.2022.e094","abstract":"In the generative literature, the pattern of coronal fricative lenition found in the traditional Chinato Spanish dialect is commonly cited as a phonological argument that the resyllabification of word-final prevocalic consonants is complete, in the sense that onsets derived by resyllabification are structurally identical to canonical (word-level) onsets. However, recent acoustic studies of Northern-Central Peninsular Spanish have problematized the completeness of resyllabification with experimental evidence that /s̺ / is shorter and more voiced as a derived onset than as a canonical onset. Using a split-gesture, competitive, coupled oscillator model of the syllable in Articulatory Phonology, which divides consonants into a separate constriction and release gesture, we propose a novel representation of ambisyllabicity that predicts the phonetic behavior of derived onset /s̺ / in Northern-Central Peninsular Spanish. We then show that ambisyllabic coupling permits a simpler phonological analysis of coronal fricative lenition in Chinato Spanish as compared to alternative accounts. Our analysis makes typological predictions that are confirmed by patterns from other contemporary Spanish varieties. Lastly, we examine the consequences of ambisyllabicity for the analysis of Spanish rhotic consonants, which have also been argued to support complete resyllabification. We offer an analysis of rhotics that is entirely compatible with an ambisyllabic representation of incomplete resyllabification.","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2023,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Loquens"},"translated_abstract":"In the generative literature, the pattern of coronal fricative lenition found in the traditional Chinato Spanish dialect is commonly cited as a phonological argument that the resyllabification of word-final prevocalic consonants is complete, in the sense that onsets derived by resyllabification are structurally identical to canonical (word-level) onsets. However, recent acoustic studies of Northern-Central Peninsular Spanish have problematized the completeness of resyllabification with experimental evidence that /s̺ / is shorter and more voiced as a derived onset than as a canonical onset. Using a split-gesture, competitive, coupled oscillator model of the syllable in Articulatory Phonology, which divides consonants into a separate constriction and release gesture, we propose a novel representation of ambisyllabicity that predicts the phonetic behavior of derived onset /s̺ / in Northern-Central Peninsular Spanish. We then show that ambisyllabic coupling permits a simpler phonological analysis of coronal fricative lenition in Chinato Spanish as compared to alternative accounts. Our analysis makes typological predictions that are confirmed by patterns from other contemporary Spanish varieties. Lastly, we examine the consequences of ambisyllabicity for the analysis of Spanish rhotic consonants, which have also been argued to support complete resyllabification. We offer an analysis of rhotics that is entirely compatible with an ambisyllabic representation of incomplete resyllabification.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/104961720/Incomplete_Resyllabification_and_Ambisyllabic_Gestural_Coupling_in_Spanish","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2023-07-26T15:39:25.046-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":8774974,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[{"id":40154329,"work_id":104961720,"tagging_user_id":8774974,"tagged_user_id":279351109,"co_author_invite_id":7883693,"email":"k***2@uwlax.edu","affiliation":"University of Wisconsin La Crosse","display_order":1,"name":"Kimberly Morris","title":"Incomplete Resyllabification and Ambisyllabic Gestural Coupling in Spanish"},{"id":40154330,"work_id":104961720,"tagging_user_id":8774974,"tagged_user_id":155516247,"co_author_invite_id":null,"email":"l***s@uci.edu","affiliation":"University of California, Irvine","display_order":2,"name":"Lillian Jones","title":"Incomplete Resyllabification and Ambisyllabic Gestural Coupling in Spanish"}],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":104547841,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/104547841/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Bradley_Morris_Jones_2023.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/104547841/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Incomplete_Resyllabification_and_Ambisyl.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/104547841/Bradley_Morris_Jones_2023-libre.pdf?1690412786=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DIncomplete_Resyllabification_and_Ambisyl.pdf\u0026Expires=1732425101\u0026Signature=fcqLjvE9Z7vPluSMYvNExB4hMRu1JftO8DHnX7WGCdYMMGG5rh8zx7FpFYzwZwnZvz4ndXpEnNhzS8jX-YKz58jWayco22VkeBrWYT4nZEBtfJI1ct31caE-PWtyatJUQ4iTv6t7yzRUAbR6HFJCxL5348yUAnDRIrqaIz2uBz~0f9uatCIAS7f5EqeUH~6s6gx~k0BTn~cQgUsB67bY4V7afun3i-vWZYQtCrNe9JmMkol00XrbKoXQkYXH3OapE2iignoFxzEy1JiYU8K~0GQBcpE7NznQT2uNGzOQ1Ib08hu31BDN2WO6Wkmri~-TISi11GCsI9fTZdiGD6bGGQ__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Incomplete_Resyllabification_and_Ambisyllabic_Gestural_Coupling_in_Spanish","translated_slug":"","page_count":19,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","owner":{"id":8774974,"first_name":"Travis","middle_initials":"G","last_name":"Bradley","page_name":"TravisBradley","domain_name":"ucdavis","created_at":"2014-02-01T16:29:50.303-08:00","display_name":"Travis G Bradley","url":"https://ucdavis.academia.edu/TravisBradley"},"attachments":[{"id":104547841,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/104547841/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Bradley_Morris_Jones_2023.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/104547841/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Incomplete_Resyllabification_and_Ambisyl.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/104547841/Bradley_Morris_Jones_2023-libre.pdf?1690412786=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DIncomplete_Resyllabification_and_Ambisyl.pdf\u0026Expires=1732425101\u0026Signature=fcqLjvE9Z7vPluSMYvNExB4hMRu1JftO8DHnX7WGCdYMMGG5rh8zx7FpFYzwZwnZvz4ndXpEnNhzS8jX-YKz58jWayco22VkeBrWYT4nZEBtfJI1ct31caE-PWtyatJUQ4iTv6t7yzRUAbR6HFJCxL5348yUAnDRIrqaIz2uBz~0f9uatCIAS7f5EqeUH~6s6gx~k0BTn~cQgUsB67bY4V7afun3i-vWZYQtCrNe9JmMkol00XrbKoXQkYXH3OapE2iignoFxzEy1JiYU8K~0GQBcpE7NznQT2uNGzOQ1Ib08hu31BDN2WO6Wkmri~-TISi11GCsI9fTZdiGD6bGGQ__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":1239,"name":"Phonology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Phonology"},{"id":12492,"name":"Spanish Linguistics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Spanish_Linguistics"},{"id":16617,"name":"Phonetics-Phonology Interface","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Phonetics-Phonology_Interface"},{"id":16618,"name":"Optimality Theory","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Optimality_Theory"},{"id":144922,"name":"Syllable Structure","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Syllable_Structure"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="95008212"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/95008212/Judeo_Spanish"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Judeo-Spanish" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/97309217/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/95008212/Judeo_Spanish">Judeo-Spanish</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Manual of Romance Phonetics and Phonology</span><span>, 2022</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Judeo-Spanish refers to the varieties of Spanish spoken by the Sephardic Jews, who were expelled ...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Judeo-Spanish refers to the varieties of Spanish spoken by the Sephardic Jews, who were expelled from Spain in 1492 and resettled around the Mediterranean, in North Africa and in areas of the Ottoman Empire. The language presents a mix of archaic features retained from medieval Ibero-Romance languages and innovative features arising from both internal change and contact with other languages. Despite its continued use for five centuries, Judeo-Spanish is at present severely endangered, which has prompted revitalization efforts and a renewed interest in the language from the perspectives of contemporary linguistic theory. This chapter presents a unified descriptive account of Judeo-Spanish phonology and phonetics. The account includes diachronic and synchronic comparisons across dialects and with other Ibero-Romance languages, as well as an examination of the phonological patterning of loanwords borrowed from co-territorial languages in the diaspora.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="3c5d57c3aaa064e3fa649901db460678" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:97309217,&quot;asset_id&quot;:95008212,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/97309217/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="95008212"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="95008212"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 95008212; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=95008212]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=95008212]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 95008212; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='95008212']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 95008212, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "3c5d57c3aaa064e3fa649901db460678" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=95008212]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":95008212,"title":"Judeo-Spanish","translated_title":"","metadata":{"doi":"10.1515/9783110550283","abstract":"Judeo-Spanish refers to the varieties of Spanish spoken by the Sephardic Jews, who were expelled from Spain in 1492 and resettled around the Mediterranean, in North Africa and in areas of the Ottoman Empire. The language presents a mix of archaic features retained from medieval Ibero-Romance languages and innovative features arising from both internal change and contact with other languages. Despite its continued use for five centuries, Judeo-Spanish is at present severely endangered, which has prompted revitalization efforts and a renewed interest in the language from the perspectives of contemporary linguistic theory. This chapter presents a unified descriptive account of Judeo-Spanish phonology and phonetics. 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$(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="94746370"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/94746370/Language_Contact_and_Phonological_Innovation_in_the_Voiced_Prepalatal_Obstruents_of_Judeo_Spanish"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Language Contact and Phonological Innovation in the Voiced Prepalatal Obstruents of Judeo-Spanish" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/97119040/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/94746370/Language_Contact_and_Phonological_Innovation_in_the_Voiced_Prepalatal_Obstruents_of_Judeo_Spanish">Language Contact and Phonological Innovation in the Voiced Prepalatal Obstruents of Judeo-Spanish</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--coauthors"><span>by </span><span><a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://ucdavis.academia.edu/TravisBradley">Travis G Bradley</a> and <a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://independent.academia.edu/ClaireJuliaLozano">Claire Julia Lozano</a></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">This article traces the development of voiced prepalatal obstruents /dʒ/ and /ʒ/ in Judeo-Spanish...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">This article traces the development of voiced prepalatal obstruents /dʒ/ and /ʒ/ in Judeo-Spanish, the language spoken by the Sephardic Jews since before their expulsion from late-15th century Spain. Using Medieval Spanish as a comparative starting point, we examine diachronic innovations in the phonological status and distribution of affricate /dʒ/ and fricative /ʒ/ in Judeo-Spanish during the diaspora, focusing in particular on the effects of lexical borrowing from Turkish and French in territories of the former Ottoman Empire. In contemporary Sephardic communities that are in contact with non-Sephardic varieties of Mainstream Spanish, some speakers occasionally replace syllable-initial /∫/, /dʒ/, and /ʒ/ in certain Judeo-Spanish words by a voiceless velar /x/ in efforts to accommodate the pronunciation of the corresponding Mainstream Spanish cognate form. We provide a novel analysis of Judeo-Spanish voiced prepalatal obstruents, including their diachronic and synchronic variation under language contact. The analysis combines a constraint-based approach to phonological alternations, as formalized in Optimality Theory, with a usage-based representation of the mental lexicon, as proposed in Exemplar Theory, to account for speaker- and word-specific variability. A hybrid theoretical model provides a more nuanced understanding of the relationship between lexicon and grammar in Judeo-Spanish phonology than is available in previous structuralist descriptions.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="4a2e11edb7014a4cd7ad546a5363ebec" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:97119040,&quot;asset_id&quot;:94746370,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/97119040/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="94746370"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="94746370"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 94746370; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=94746370]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=94746370]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 94746370; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='94746370']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 94746370, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "4a2e11edb7014a4cd7ad546a5363ebec" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=94746370]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":94746370,"title":"Language Contact and Phonological Innovation in the Voiced Prepalatal Obstruents of Judeo-Spanish","translated_title":"","metadata":{"doi":"10.3390/languages7040313","volume":"7","abstract":"This article traces the development of voiced prepalatal obstruents /dʒ/ and /ʒ/ in Judeo-Spanish, the language spoken by the Sephardic Jews since before their expulsion from late-15th century Spain. Using Medieval Spanish as a comparative starting point, we examine diachronic innovations in the phonological status and distribution of affricate /dʒ/ and fricative /ʒ/ in Judeo-Spanish during the diaspora, focusing in particular on the effects of lexical borrowing from Turkish and French in territories of the former Ottoman Empire. In contemporary Sephardic communities that are in contact with non-Sephardic varieties of Mainstream Spanish, some speakers occasionally replace syllable-initial /∫/, /dʒ/, and /ʒ/ in certain Judeo-Spanish words by a voiceless velar /x/ in efforts to accommodate the pronunciation of the corresponding Mainstream Spanish cognate form. We provide a novel analysis of Judeo-Spanish voiced prepalatal obstruents, including their diachronic and synchronic variation under language contact. 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$(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="44719536"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/44719536/Spanish_rhotics_and_the_phonetics_phonology_interface"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Spanish rhotics and the phonetics-phonology interface" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/95422687/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/44719536/Spanish_rhotics_and_the_phonetics_phonology_interface">Spanish rhotics and the phonetics-phonology interface</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>The Routledge Handbook of Spanish Phonology</span><span>, 2020</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">This chapter examines the patterning of rhotics in North-Central Peninsular Spanish within the co...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">This chapter examines the patterning of rhotics in North-Central Peninsular Spanish within the context of contemporary research on the phonetics-phonology interface. As phonological categories, the apico-alveolar tap and trill are in contrastive distribution between vowels within the morphological word. The contrast is neutralized elsewhere: within a syllable, prenuclear rhotics are in complementary distribution, while postnuclear rhotics are in free variation. Experimental studies have provided detailed information about the production and perception of these consonants, whose phonetic realization is much more continuous and gradient than suggested by the discrete and categorical symbols of broad transcription. This chapter presents a novel analysis of Spanish rhotics that formalizes a modular interface between an optimization-based phonology and an implementation-based phonetics. Both operate on articulatory gestures that can be coupled, or coordinated with each other in time, as represented in an intergestural coupling graph. The phonology uses abstract phonetic knowledge about perceptual distinctiveness to help optimize the distribution of consonant duration contrasts. The distribution of rhotics in the phonological output is predicted by an interaction among perceptibility, faithfulness to input gestures, and markedness constraints on rhotic-vowel coupling. When optimal coupling graphs are phonetically implemented, lawful changes in the overlap and magnitude of gestures give rise to gradient and continuous variation in the articulatory and acoustic output. Combining perceptual distinctiveness with gestural coupling makes possible a simpler analysis of the phonological distribution of Spanish rhotics, as compared with two alternative theoretical accounts. The proposed analysis distinguishes between phonology and phonetics as distinct but representationally linked modules. There is no transduction from categorical segments and features into gradient physical parameters, only optimization and implementation of intergestural coupling graphs.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="f2b6914e0b4895fa8300b45e6ae23240" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:95422687,&quot;asset_id&quot;:44719536,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/95422687/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="44719536"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="44719536"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 44719536; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=44719536]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=44719536]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 44719536; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='44719536']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 44719536, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "f2b6914e0b4895fa8300b45e6ae23240" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=44719536]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":44719536,"title":"Spanish rhotics and the phonetics-phonology interface","translated_title":"","metadata":{"doi":"10.4324/9781315228112","abstract":"This chapter examines the patterning of rhotics in North-Central Peninsular Spanish within the context of contemporary research on the phonetics-phonology interface. As phonological categories, the apico-alveolar tap and trill are in contrastive distribution between vowels within the morphological word. The contrast is neutralized elsewhere: within a syllable, prenuclear rhotics are in complementary distribution, while postnuclear rhotics are in free variation. Experimental studies have provided detailed information about the production and perception of these consonants, whose phonetic realization is much more continuous and gradient than suggested by the discrete and categorical symbols of broad transcription. This chapter presents a novel analysis of Spanish rhotics that formalizes a modular interface between an optimization-based phonology and an implementation-based phonetics. Both operate on articulatory gestures that can be coupled, or coordinated with each other in time, as represented in an intergestural coupling graph. The phonology uses abstract phonetic knowledge about perceptual distinctiveness to help optimize the distribution of consonant duration contrasts. The distribution of rhotics in the phonological output is predicted by an interaction among perceptibility, faithfulness to input gestures, and markedness constraints on rhotic-vowel coupling. When optimal coupling graphs are phonetically implemented, lawful changes in the overlap and magnitude of gestures give rise to gradient and continuous variation in the articulatory and acoustic output. Combining perceptual distinctiveness with gestural coupling makes possible a simpler analysis of the phonological distribution of Spanish rhotics, as compared with two alternative theoretical accounts. The proposed analysis distinguishes between phonology and phonetics as distinct but representationally linked modules. 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Experimental studies have provided detailed information about the production and perception of these consonants, whose phonetic realization is much more continuous and gradient than suggested by the discrete and categorical symbols of broad transcription. This chapter presents a novel analysis of Spanish rhotics that formalizes a modular interface between an optimization-based phonology and an implementation-based phonetics. Both operate on articulatory gestures that can be coupled, or coordinated with each other in time, as represented in an intergestural coupling graph. The phonology uses abstract phonetic knowledge about perceptual distinctiveness to help optimize the distribution of consonant duration contrasts. The distribution of rhotics in the phonological output is predicted by an interaction among perceptibility, faithfulness to input gestures, and markedness constraints on rhotic-vowel coupling. 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$(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="7095921"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/7095921/Descripci%C3%B3n_fon%C3%A9tica_de_las_consonantes_r%C3%B3ticas"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Descripción fonética de las consonantes róticas" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/7095921/Descripci%C3%B3n_fon%C3%A9tica_de_las_consonantes_r%C3%B3ticas">Descripción fonética de las consonantes róticas</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Fonética y fonología descriptivas de la lengua española. Juana Gil y Joaquim Llisterri (eds.). Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press</span><span>, 2024</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="7095921"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="7095921"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 7095921; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=7095921]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=7095921]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 7095921; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='7095921']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 7095921, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=7095921]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":7095921,"title":"Descripción fonética de las consonantes róticas","translated_title":"","metadata":{"page_numbers":"751-789","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2024,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Fonética y fonología descriptivas de la lengua española. 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Common in simple responses such as sif ‘yes’ and nof ‘no’, this sociolectal feature, referred to as sifeísimo (Adams 2015), has been attributed to the devoicing of the common filler word, pues ‘then, well, cos’ (Haboud and de la Vega 2008). The present analysis utilizes moraic phonology, couched in Optimality Theory (Prince and Smolensky 1993/2004; McCarthy and Prince 1995), along with the principles of gestural coordination, as represented in Articulatory Phonology (Browman and Goldstein 1989, 1990), to show how an existing dialectal preference for vowel devoicing and the bilabial pronunciation of &lt;f&gt; favor the emergence of sifeísmo in the Quito context.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="417bdf7564ec507a84a829604ecb2660" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:95423543,&quot;asset_id&quot;:37697314,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/95423543/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="37697314"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="37697314"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 37697314; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=37697314]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=37697314]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 37697314; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='37697314']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 37697314, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "417bdf7564ec507a84a829604ecb2660" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=37697314]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":37697314,"title":"Phonological and Phonetic Aspects of Sifeísmo in Quito Spanish","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"This chapter employs a phonetics-phonology approach to describe the emergence of an emphatic, utterance final -f observed in informal speech in Quito Spanish. 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$(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="37697313"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/37697313/Aspectos_fonolo_gicos_y_fone_ticos_del_sifei_smo_en_el_espan_ol_quiten_o"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Aspectos fonológicos y fonéticos del sifeísmo en el español quiteño" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/57688465/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/37697313/Aspectos_fonolo_gicos_y_fone_ticos_del_sifei_smo_en_el_espan_ol_quiten_o">Aspectos fonológicos y fonéticos del sifeísmo en el español quiteño</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--coauthors"><span>by </span><span><a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://udenver.academia.edu/KathleenGuerra">Kathleen Guerra</a> and <a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://ucdavis.academia.edu/TravisBradley">Travis G Bradley</a></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Aspectos fonológicos y fonéticos del sifeísmo en el español quiteño</span><span>, 2019</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">This is a 2019 translation into Spanish of the following article: Guerra, Kathleen S., and Tra...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">This is a 2019 translation into Spanish of the following article: <br /> <br />Guerra, Kathleen S., and Travis G. Bradley. 2022. Phonological and Phonetic Aspects of Sifeísmo in Quito Spanish. In Ecuadorian Spanish in the 21st Century: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives, edited by Rosario Gómez, Erin O&#39;Rourke, and Christina García, Cambridge Scholars Publishing, pp. 227-250.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="7f2b6bc81ce053e992cf4dcb2f05750b" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:57688465,&quot;asset_id&quot;:37697313,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/57688465/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="37697313"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="37697313"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 37697313; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=37697313]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=37697313]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 37697313; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='37697313']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 37697313, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "7f2b6bc81ce053e992cf4dcb2f05750b" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=37697313]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":37697313,"title":"Aspectos fonológicos y fonéticos del sifeísmo en el español quiteño","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"This is a 2019 translation into Spanish of the following article:\r\n\r\nGuerra, Kathleen S., and Travis G. 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$(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="33415308"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/33415308/Sonority_Distance_and_Similarity_Avoidance_Effects_in_Moroccan_Judeo_Spanish"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Sonority Distance and Similarity Avoidance Effects in Moroccan Judeo-Spanish" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/53467881/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/33415308/Sonority_Distance_and_Similarity_Avoidance_Effects_in_Moroccan_Judeo_Spanish">Sonority Distance and Similarity Avoidance Effects in Moroccan Judeo-Spanish</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--coauthors"><span>by </span><span><a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://ucdavis.academia.edu/TravisBradley">Travis G Bradley</a> and <a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://miis.academia.edu/JacobAdams">Jacob Adams</a></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Linguistics: An Interdisciplinary Journal of the Language Sciences</span><span>, 2018</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">This article investigates consonant gemination in late 19th-and early 20th-century haketía, a now...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">This article investigates consonant gemination in late 19th-and early 20th-century haketía, a now moribund, regional dialect of Judeo-Spanish spoken in northern Morocco since the late 15th century. Some, but not all, consonant clusters arising across a word boundary undergo regressive total assimilation, e.g. [n.n] siudad ninguna &#39;no city&#39; but [z.n] laz niñas &#39;the girls&#39;. We present novel descriptive generalizations to show that regressive gemination is sensitive to the degree of sonority distance between the coda and the onset. Evidence of parasitic harmony comes from lateral+consonant clusters, which undergo gemination only if the target and trigger consonants are already similar in some respect. In the framework of Optimality Theory, we formalize syllable contact as a relational hierarchy of *DISTANCE constraints and capture parasitic harmony effects by similarity avoidance, or Obligatory Contour Principle, constraints against adjacent consonants with identical manner and/or place features. These markedness constraints interact with other universal faithfulness and markedness constraints in a language-specific ranking that predicts the attested patterns of regressive gemination. This study lends further support to sonority distance effects and gradient syllable contact in phonological theory and shows that similarity avoidance is also necessary to give a full account of regressive gemination in Moroccan Judeo-Spanish.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="382fcf5be5b0a3bc6c5e569d49a3db4e" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:53467881,&quot;asset_id&quot;:33415308,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/53467881/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="33415308"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="33415308"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 33415308; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=33415308]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=33415308]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 33415308; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='33415308']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 33415308, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "382fcf5be5b0a3bc6c5e569d49a3db4e" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=33415308]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":33415308,"title":"Sonority Distance and Similarity Avoidance Effects in Moroccan Judeo-Spanish","translated_title":"","metadata":{"doi":"10.1515/ling-2018-0028","issue":"6","volume":"56","abstract":"This article investigates consonant gemination in late 19th-and early 20th-century haketía, a now moribund, regional dialect of Judeo-Spanish spoken in northern Morocco since the late 15th century. 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href="https://www.academia.edu/5914716/Labialization_and_Palatalization_in_Judeo_Spanish_Phonology"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Labialization and Palatalization in Judeo-Spanish Phonology" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/32895095/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/5914716/Labialization_and_Palatalization_in_Judeo_Spanish_Phonology">Labialization and Palatalization in Judeo-Spanish Phonology</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>In Jason Smith and Tabea Ihsane (eds.), Romance Linguistics 2012. Selected papers from the 42nd Linguistic Symposium on Romance Languages (LSRL), Cedar City, Utah, 20-22 April 2012, 63-83. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins</span><span>, 2015</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Judeo-Spanish (JS) presents a number of phonological processes involving secondary articulations....</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Judeo-Spanish (JS) presents a number of phonological processes involving secondary articulations. This paper establishes novel descriptive generalizations based on labialization and palatalization phenomena across different JS dialects. I show how these generalizations are part of a broader cross-linguistic typology of secondary articulation patterns, which would remain incomplete on the basis of non-Sephardic Spanish alone. I propose an analysis in Optimality Theory (OT) that accounts for this variation using the same universal constraints that are active in languages beyond Ibero-Romance. This paper demonstrates the utility of OT as an analytical framework for doing JS phonology and in turn highlights the importance of JS to phonological theory by bringing new generalizations and data to bear on the analysis of secondary articulations.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="428ba082c3d57f4204864e0f36d7fbe0" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:32895095,&quot;asset_id&quot;:5914716,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/32895095/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="5914716"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="5914716"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 5914716; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=5914716]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=5914716]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 5914716; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='5914716']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 5914716, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "428ba082c3d57f4204864e0f36d7fbe0" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=5914716]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":5914716,"title":"Labialization and Palatalization in Judeo-Spanish Phonology","translated_title":"","metadata":{"doi":"10.1075/rllt.7.06bra","abstract":"Judeo-Spanish (JS) presents a number of phonological processes involving secondary articulations. 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$(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="7095900"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/7095900/Optimality_Theory_and_Spanish_Phonology"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Optimality Theory and Spanish Phonology" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/33740850/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/7095900/Optimality_Theory_and_Spanish_Phonology">Optimality Theory and Spanish Phonology</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Language and Linguistics Compass</span><span>, 2014</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">This article surveys research in Spanish phonology from the perspective of Optimality Theory, a f...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">This article surveys research in Spanish phonology from the perspective of Optimality Theory, a formal linguistic framework based on ranked and violable constraints. Theoretical insights from OT enrich our understanding of Spanish phonology, and Spanish data also figure prominently in the latest theoretical developments within OT. The article concludes with areas for ongoing research and suggestions for further reading on OT in Spanish phonology.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="3bf68ea65c6e3b35d75e28658379d9f8" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:33740850,&quot;asset_id&quot;:7095900,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/33740850/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="7095900"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="7095900"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 7095900; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=7095900]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=7095900]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 7095900; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='7095900']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 7095900, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "3bf68ea65c6e3b35d75e28658379d9f8" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=7095900]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":7095900,"title":"Optimality Theory and Spanish Phonology","translated_title":"","metadata":{"doi":"10.1111/lnc3.12065","issue":"2","volume":"8","abstract":"This article surveys research in Spanish phonology from the perspective of Optimality Theory, a formal linguistic framework based on ranked and violable constraints. 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Bradley (eds.), Fonología generativa contemporánea de la lengua española (2a edición), 319-367. Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press</span><span>, 2014</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="38470832"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="38470832"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 38470832; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=38470832]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=38470832]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 38470832; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='38470832']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 38470832, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=38470832]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":38470832,"title":"Fonología de laboratorio","translated_title":"","metadata":{"publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2014,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"In Rafael Núñez Cedeño, Sonia Colina and Travis G. 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This study presents a spectrographic analysis of syllable-initial rhotics as produced by ten speakers of Veracruz Mexican Spanish in a guided, semi-spontaneous speech task. Trills that show a reduction in the degree of lingual trilling usually contain an approximant phase following one or two lingual contacts, which we represent as [ɾɹ] or [rɹ] in narrow transcription. Intervocalic taps show both reduction and elision, but those with a measurable contact are short enough to maintain an acoustic difference with the longer allophones of /r/. Taken with recent studies of rhotics in Dominican Spanish, these findings suggest that the contrast between /r/ and /ɾ/ can be maintained in terms of overall segmental duration even when there is no difference in the number of lingual contacts.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="47cb9d0f87e445616157a5a1bae535c5" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:33740878,&quot;asset_id&quot;:7095930,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/33740878/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="7095930"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="7095930"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 7095930; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=7095930]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=7095930]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 7095930; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='7095930']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 7095930, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "47cb9d0f87e445616157a5a1bae535c5" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=7095930]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":7095930,"title":"Rhotic Variation and Contrast in Veracruz Mexican Spanish","translated_title":"","metadata":{"issue":"1","volume":"21","abstract":"Phonetic studies of Spanish rhotics report a wide range of allophonic variants of the syllable-initial trill /r/, which raises the question of whether the intervocalic contrast between /r/ and the tap /ɾ/ has been neutralized in many dialects. This study presents a spectrographic analysis of syllable-initial rhotics as produced by ten speakers of Veracruz Mexican Spanish in a guided, semi-spontaneous speech task. Trills that show a reduction in the degree of lingual trilling usually contain an approximant phase following one or two lingual contacts, which we represent as [ɾɹ] or [rɹ] in narrow transcription. Intervocalic taps show both reduction and elision, but those with a measurable contact are short enough to maintain an acoustic difference with the longer allophones of /r/. Taken with recent studies of rhotics in Dominican Spanish, these findings suggest that the contrast between /r/ and /ɾ/ can be maintained in terms of overall segmental duration even when there is no difference in the number of lingual contacts. ","page_numbers":"43-74","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2012,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Estudios de fonética experimental"},"translated_abstract":"Phonetic studies of Spanish rhotics report a wide range of allophonic variants of the syllable-initial trill /r/, which raises the question of whether the intervocalic contrast between /r/ and the tap /ɾ/ has been neutralized in many dialects. This study presents a spectrographic analysis of syllable-initial rhotics as produced by ten speakers of Veracruz Mexican Spanish in a guided, semi-spontaneous speech task. Trills that show a reduction in the degree of lingual trilling usually contain an approximant phase following one or two lingual contacts, which we represent as [ɾɹ] or [rɹ] in narrow transcription. Intervocalic taps show both reduction and elision, but those with a measurable contact are short enough to maintain an acoustic difference with the longer allophones of /r/. Taken with recent studies of rhotics in Dominican Spanish, these findings suggest that the contrast between /r/ and /ɾ/ can be maintained in terms of overall segmental duration even when there is no difference in the number of lingual contacts. 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Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins</span><span>, 2011</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">This paper surveys the distribution of mid front vowels before rhotics in five different varietie...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">This paper surveys the distribution of mid front vowels before rhotics in five different varieties of Ibero-Romance and identifies typological patterns of vowel lowering. An analysis is proposed in Optimality Theory that employs a fixed ranking of phonetically grounded markedness constraints against closed mid front /e/ in different pre-rhotic contexts, organized in an implicational hierarchy. Faithfulness constraints on vowel place features interact with this ranking to generate a factorial typology of /e/-lowering that matches the distribution observed in the data and makes predictions about possible and impossible languages. The paper also discusses theoretical implications for the status of intervocalic trills in Ibero-Romance as singleton versus geminate segments.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="1e78299c8c3e64f882b5a53f3ad52b86" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:58536170,&quot;asset_id&quot;:38470859,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/58536170/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="38470859"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="38470859"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 38470859; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=38470859]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=38470859]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 38470859; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='38470859']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 38470859, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "1e78299c8c3e64f882b5a53f3ad52b86" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=38470859]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":38470859,"title":"Mid Front Vowel Lowering before Rhotics in Ibero-Romance","translated_title":"","metadata":{"doi":"10.1075/cilt.318.05bra","abstract":"This paper surveys the distribution of mid front vowels before rhotics in five different varieties of Ibero-Romance and identifies typological patterns of vowel lowering. 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The paper also discusses theoretical implications for the status of intervocalic trills in Ibero-Romance as singleton versus geminate segments.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/38470859/Mid_Front_Vowel_Lowering_before_Rhotics_in_Ibero_Romance","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2019-03-02T22:17:19.046-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":8774974,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":58536170,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/58536170/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Bradley_2011_Mid_Front_Vowel_Lowering_before_Rhotics_in_Ibero-Romance.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/58536170/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Mid_Front_Vowel_Lowering_before_Rhotics.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/58536170/Bradley_2011_Mid_Front_Vowel_Lowering_before_Rhotics_in_Ibero-Romance-libre.pdf?1551602392=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DMid_Front_Vowel_Lowering_before_Rhotics.pdf\u0026Expires=1732452381\u0026Signature=Dj~0mbMKMUPFwz2pcwSh-p9disbOORfYJuHtCugSSc-IpK26uaOTrOybWKvkwmGVOm8Cln~gz9RaTaPZsw6UJhQzT4~rVduzyglWzGPSmg-OTuJtab-114BMLc4K9PevYDSKK8pGIAusaT0kGs9YIvcvLlb077iMxNwkVjGREAozpWQx0SLzVnn7oox9Xk2hx-Y2fNMMFl6kE6EiA7WZp9qGbPMyWLZjYzqdKtwsZsoZOPqDvBO70Ux1jIIFM9rfMckXYLP0tqqqX~SIW1ddJQL-l1HlfMbj~F6NITRZ0mUZ6pIzeueXCvoyG46w72BiBpBi3O1hZxSNdy2t37itvA__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Mid_Front_Vowel_Lowering_before_Rhotics_in_Ibero_Romance","translated_slug":"","page_count":16,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","owner":{"id":8774974,"first_name":"Travis","middle_initials":"G","last_name":"Bradley","page_name":"TravisBradley","domain_name":"ucdavis","created_at":"2014-02-01T16:29:50.303-08:00","display_name":"Travis G Bradley","url":"https://ucdavis.academia.edu/TravisBradley"},"attachments":[{"id":58536170,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/58536170/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Bradley_2011_Mid_Front_Vowel_Lowering_before_Rhotics_in_Ibero-Romance.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/58536170/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Mid_Front_Vowel_Lowering_before_Rhotics.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/58536170/Bradley_2011_Mid_Front_Vowel_Lowering_before_Rhotics_in_Ibero-Romance-libre.pdf?1551602392=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DMid_Front_Vowel_Lowering_before_Rhotics.pdf\u0026Expires=1732452381\u0026Signature=Dj~0mbMKMUPFwz2pcwSh-p9disbOORfYJuHtCugSSc-IpK26uaOTrOybWKvkwmGVOm8Cln~gz9RaTaPZsw6UJhQzT4~rVduzyglWzGPSmg-OTuJtab-114BMLc4K9PevYDSKK8pGIAusaT0kGs9YIvcvLlb077iMxNwkVjGREAozpWQx0SLzVnn7oox9Xk2hx-Y2fNMMFl6kE6EiA7WZp9qGbPMyWLZjYzqdKtwsZsoZOPqDvBO70Ux1jIIFM9rfMckXYLP0tqqqX~SIW1ddJQL-l1HlfMbj~F6NITRZ0mUZ6pIzeueXCvoyG46w72BiBpBi3O1hZxSNdy2t37itvA__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":1239,"name":"Phonology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Phonology"},{"id":16618,"name":"Optimality Theory","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Optimality_Theory"},{"id":29859,"name":"Romance Linguistics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Romance_Linguistics"},{"id":74167,"name":"Rhotics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Rhotics"}],"urls":[{"id":8710438,"url":"http://benjamins.com/catalog/cilt.318.05bra"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="38471266"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/38471266/The_Phonology_Morphology_Interface_in_Judeo_Spanish_Diminutive_Formation_A_Lexical_Ordering_and_Subcategorization_Approach"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of The Phonology-Morphology Interface in Judeo-Spanish Diminutive Formation: A Lexical Ordering and Subcategorization Approach" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/95424846/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/38471266/The_Phonology_Morphology_Interface_in_Judeo_Spanish_Diminutive_Formation_A_Lexical_Ordering_and_Subcategorization_Approach">The Phonology-Morphology Interface in Judeo-Spanish Diminutive Formation: A Lexical Ordering and Subcategorization Approach</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>With Jason Smith. Studies in Hispanic and Lusophone Linguistics</span><span>, 2011</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">In this article we examine diminutive formation in Judeo-Spanish, which has not been treated befo...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">In this article we examine diminutive formation in Judeo-Spanish, which has not been treated before in the generative literature. The distribution of diminutive suffixes is shown to be predictable based on an interaction of morphological and phonological properties, which is a recognized hallmark of diminutive formation in Spanish more generally. Judeo-Spanish also presents some interesting twists not commonly found in other varieties of Spanish. A formal analysis is developed in Optimality Theory that builds upon recent work on allomorph selection involving lexical ordering and subcategorization. A comparison with previous analyses of other Spanish varieties shows that our approach can account for the behavior of nominal class markers in diminutivization, as well as the alternation of diminutive allomorphs, while avoiding the proliferation of language- and morpheme-specific constraints. Furthermore, our account sheds new light on the moraic status of glides in rising and falling diphthongs and of the trill in word-medial intervocalic position.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="ec429b9883efd4efad22c9a7ffa70b98" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:95424846,&quot;asset_id&quot;:38471266,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/95424846/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="38471266"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="38471266"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 38471266; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=38471266]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=38471266]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 38471266; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='38471266']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 38471266, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "ec429b9883efd4efad22c9a7ffa70b98" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=38471266]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":38471266,"title":"The Phonology-Morphology Interface in Judeo-Spanish Diminutive Formation: A Lexical Ordering and Subcategorization Approach","translated_title":"","metadata":{"doi":"10.1515/shll-2011-1103","issue":"2","volume":"4","abstract":"In this article we examine diminutive formation in Judeo-Spanish, which has not been treated before in the generative literature. The distribution of diminutive suffixes is shown to be predictable based on an interaction of morphological and phonological properties, which is a recognized hallmark of diminutive formation in Spanish more generally. Judeo-Spanish also presents some interesting twists not commonly found in other varieties of Spanish. A formal analysis is developed in Optimality Theory that builds upon recent work on allomorph selection involving lexical ordering and subcategorization. A comparison with previous analyses of other Spanish varieties shows that our approach can account for the behavior of nominal class markers in diminutivization, as well as the alternation of diminutive allomorphs, while avoiding the proliferation of language- and morpheme-specific constraints. Furthermore, our account sheds new light on the moraic status of glides in rising and falling diphthongs and of the trill in word-medial intervocalic position.","page_numbers":"247-300","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2011,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"With Jason Smith. Studies in Hispanic and Lusophone Linguistics"},"translated_abstract":"In this article we examine diminutive formation in Judeo-Spanish, which has not been treated before in the generative literature. The distribution of diminutive suffixes is shown to be predictable based on an interaction of morphological and phonological properties, which is a recognized hallmark of diminutive formation in Spanish more generally. Judeo-Spanish also presents some interesting twists not commonly found in other varieties of Spanish. A formal analysis is developed in Optimality Theory that builds upon recent work on allomorph selection involving lexical ordering and subcategorization. A comparison with previous analyses of other Spanish varieties shows that our approach can account for the behavior of nominal class markers in diminutivization, as well as the alternation of diminutive allomorphs, while avoiding the proliferation of language- and morpheme-specific constraints. Furthermore, our account sheds new light on the moraic status of glides in rising and falling diphthongs and of the trill in word-medial intervocalic position.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/38471266/The_Phonology_Morphology_Interface_in_Judeo_Spanish_Diminutive_Formation_A_Lexical_Ordering_and_Subcategorization_Approach","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2019-03-02T22:38:33.834-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":8774974,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":95424846,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/95424846/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Bradley_and_Smith_2011.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/95424846/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"The_Phonology_Morphology_Interface_in_Ju.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/95424846/Bradley_and_Smith_2011-libre.pdf?1670489658=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DThe_Phonology_Morphology_Interface_in_Ju.pdf\u0026Expires=1732452381\u0026Signature=NM92bprhSMeqJYB4c0QX9e-4OfO5HcJSPTMIpmbucKISA4jk36ahklCjEN77AkwdE2120VXxIGQXKm0lZosbRrOfQW6WXivxpPSg0SRHO0fpn0b~gqDSvqdikxM6FO6II~aXcgAa7TzBmBAD7-NZxCc2DZCnrKbipXQULJXbZbnspzTP9-1zZ0gm7nHapEMsPjKD48mngeOFOnjqydVhKe81MzTskgc7g~9IaYBneM7FgiFT8Z1FljzjNqY9mOFto0GubCJLnNE8RSgOnBcfnfk-PaXNYd5sA0GvCV2uGj6s-obsyIgXbMG2aVq36jOC9G5f3HAQnmR1syKzmBb~hA__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"The_Phonology_Morphology_Interface_in_Judeo_Spanish_Diminutive_Formation_A_Lexical_Ordering_and_Subcategorization_Approach","translated_slug":"","page_count":54,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","owner":{"id":8774974,"first_name":"Travis","middle_initials":"G","last_name":"Bradley","page_name":"TravisBradley","domain_name":"ucdavis","created_at":"2014-02-01T16:29:50.303-08:00","display_name":"Travis G Bradley","url":"https://ucdavis.academia.edu/TravisBradley"},"attachments":[{"id":95424846,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/95424846/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Bradley_and_Smith_2011.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/95424846/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"The_Phonology_Morphology_Interface_in_Ju.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/95424846/Bradley_and_Smith_2011-libre.pdf?1670489658=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DThe_Phonology_Morphology_Interface_in_Ju.pdf\u0026Expires=1732452381\u0026Signature=NM92bprhSMeqJYB4c0QX9e-4OfO5HcJSPTMIpmbucKISA4jk36ahklCjEN77AkwdE2120VXxIGQXKm0lZosbRrOfQW6WXivxpPSg0SRHO0fpn0b~gqDSvqdikxM6FO6II~aXcgAa7TzBmBAD7-NZxCc2DZCnrKbipXQULJXbZbnspzTP9-1zZ0gm7nHapEMsPjKD48mngeOFOnjqydVhKe81MzTskgc7g~9IaYBneM7FgiFT8Z1FljzjNqY9mOFto0GubCJLnNE8RSgOnBcfnfk-PaXNYd5sA0GvCV2uGj6s-obsyIgXbMG2aVq36jOC9G5f3HAQnmR1syKzmBb~hA__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":1239,"name":"Phonology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Phonology"},{"id":12492,"name":"Spanish Linguistics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Spanish_Linguistics"},{"id":16618,"name":"Optimality Theory","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Optimality_Theory"},{"id":316032,"name":"Ladino (Judeo-Spanish) Language and Literature","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Ladino_Judeo-Spanish_Language_and_Literature"}],"urls":[{"id":8710451,"url":"http://www.degruyter.com/view/j/shll.2011.4.issue-2/shll-2011-1103/shll-2011-1103.xml"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="7095836"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/7095836/On_the_Syllabificaion_of_Prevocalic_w_in_Judeo_Spanish"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of On the Syllabificaion of Prevocalic /w/ in Judeo-Spanish" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/33740810/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/7095836/On_the_Syllabificaion_of_Prevocalic_w_in_Judeo_Spanish">On the Syllabificaion of Prevocalic /w/ in Judeo-Spanish</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>In Pascual J. Masullo, Erin O&#39;Rourke and Chia-Hui Huang (eds.), Romance Linguistics 2007: Selected Papers from the 37th Linguistic Symposium on Romance Languages, 51-67. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins</span><span>, 2009</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Spanish prevocalic glides belong to the syllable nucleus except when no less sonorous segment is ...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Spanish prevocalic glides belong to the syllable nucleus except when no less sonorous segment is available to serve as onset (Harris 1983, Harris &amp; Kaisse 1999, Hualde 1989, 1991). Phonological innovations in a particular group of Judeo-Spanish dialects point to a novel generalization regarding the labiovelar glide, namely that /w/ is realized as secondary labialization on a preceding consonant. Evidence supporting this structural innovation comes from an asymmetry in the distribution of labialization. In these dialects, prevocalic /w/ strengthens to a labialized dorsal obstruent in syllable-initial position (ɡʷéso ‘bone’) but is realized as a secondary articulation on a preceding labial (pʷéðe ‘can’) or dorsal (kʷé.ðɾa ‘rope’). Labialized coronals are disallowed and show several historical reflexes depending on the coronal’s manner of articulation: nasal place assimilation (nwe&gt;mʷe), medial vowel epenthesis (twe&gt;tuɣʷe), and prothesis (swe&gt;esʍʷe). These innovations are analyzed in Optimality Theory in terms of interacting markedness and faithfulness constraints. The proposed account has implications for the issue of possible repair strategies, a.k.a. the “too-many-solutions” problem.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="56d97871a796e7aea9f7bd796359dac0" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:33740810,&quot;asset_id&quot;:7095836,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/33740810/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="7095836"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="7095836"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 7095836; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=7095836]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=7095836]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 7095836; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='7095836']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 7095836, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "56d97871a796e7aea9f7bd796359dac0" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=7095836]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":7095836,"title":"On the Syllabificaion of Prevocalic /w/ in Judeo-Spanish","translated_title":"","metadata":{"doi":"10.1075/cilt.304.05bra","abstract":"Spanish prevocalic glides belong to the syllable nucleus except when no less sonorous segment is available to serve as onset (Harris 1983, Harris \u0026 Kaisse 1999, Hualde 1989, 1991). Phonological innovations in a particular group of Judeo-Spanish dialects point to a novel generalization regarding the labiovelar glide, namely that /w/ is realized as secondary labialization on a preceding consonant. Evidence supporting this structural innovation comes from an asymmetry in the distribution of labialization. In these dialects, prevocalic /w/ strengthens to a labialized dorsal obstruent in syllable-initial position (ɡʷéso ‘bone’) but is realized as a secondary articulation on a preceding labial (pʷéðe ‘can’) or dorsal (kʷé.ðɾa ‘rope’). Labialized coronals are disallowed and show several historical reflexes depending on the coronal’s manner of articulation: nasal place assimilation (nwe\u003emʷe), medial vowel epenthesis (twe\u003etuɣʷe), and prothesis (swe\u003eesʍʷe). These innovations are analyzed in Optimality Theory in terms of interacting markedness and faithfulness constraints. The proposed account has implications for the issue of possible repair strategies, a.k.a. the “too-many-solutions” problem. ","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2009,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"In Pascual J. Masullo, Erin O'Rourke and Chia-Hui Huang (eds.), Romance Linguistics 2007: Selected Papers from the 37th Linguistic Symposium on Romance Languages, 51-67. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins"},"translated_abstract":"Spanish prevocalic glides belong to the syllable nucleus except when no less sonorous segment is available to serve as onset (Harris 1983, Harris \u0026 Kaisse 1999, Hualde 1989, 1991). Phonological innovations in a particular group of Judeo-Spanish dialects point to a novel generalization regarding the labiovelar glide, namely that /w/ is realized as secondary labialization on a preceding consonant. Evidence supporting this structural innovation comes from an asymmetry in the distribution of labialization. In these dialects, prevocalic /w/ strengthens to a labialized dorsal obstruent in syllable-initial position (ɡʷéso ‘bone’) but is realized as a secondary articulation on a preceding labial (pʷéðe ‘can’) or dorsal (kʷé.ðɾa ‘rope’). Labialized coronals are disallowed and show several historical reflexes depending on the coronal’s manner of articulation: nasal place assimilation (nwe\u003emʷe), medial vowel epenthesis (twe\u003etuɣʷe), and prothesis (swe\u003eesʍʷe). These innovations are analyzed in Optimality Theory in terms of interacting markedness and faithfulness constraints. The proposed account has implications for the issue of possible repair strategies, a.k.a. the “too-many-solutions” problem. 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Contrast Maintenance of Taps and Trills in Dominican Spanish: Data and Analysis" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/32515100/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/5367961/2008_Contrast_Maintenance_of_Taps_and_Trills_in_Dominican_Spanish_Data_and_Analysis">2008. Contrast Maintenance of Taps and Trills in Dominican Spanish: Data and Analysis</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--coauthors"><span>by </span><span><a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://ucdavis.academia.edu/TravisBradley">Travis G Bradley</a> and <a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://indiana.academia.edu/ErikWillis">Erik W Willis</a></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="945bd8fd27484ea4c3a4794abcfe1eb1" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:32515100,&quot;asset_id&quot;:5367961,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/32515100/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="5367961"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="5367961"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 5367961; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=5367961]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=5367961]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 5367961; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='5367961']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 5367961, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "945bd8fd27484ea4c3a4794abcfe1eb1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=5367961]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":5367961,"title":"2008. Contrast Maintenance of Taps and Trills in Dominican Spanish: Data and Analysis","translated_title":"","metadata":{"grobid_abstract":"as well as the audience members of the 3 rd Conference on Laboratory Approaches to Spanish Phonology. The current paper has also benefited from the comments and questions of two anonymous reviewers. are used with permission from Cambridge University Press. We are responsible for any shortcomings in the present work. 1 This claim by Hammond goes against multiple laboratory examinations of the trill in Peninsular Spanish such as","grobid_abstract_attachment_id":32515100},"translated_abstract":null,"internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/5367961/2008_Contrast_Maintenance_of_Taps_and_Trills_in_Dominican_Spanish_Data_and_Analysis","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2013-12-09T13:14:56.165-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":7465427,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[{"id":15448098,"work_id":5367961,"tagging_user_id":7465427,"tagged_user_id":8774974,"co_author_invite_id":null,"email":"t***y@gmail.com","affiliation":"University of California, Davis","display_order":0,"name":"Travis G Bradley","title":"2008. 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This paper analyzes several types of sonorant consonant metathesis in Judeo-Spanish within the framework of Optimality Theory. Following Holt&#39;s (2004) account of Old Spanish, local metathesis of dl, dn, and nr clusters is analyzed as a repair strategy for bad syllable contact. A novel analysis is proposed in which nasal place assimilation and positional faithfulness constraints account for the failure of dm metathesis in morphologically derived environments. Judeo-Spanish also has two types of innovative rhotic metathesis that cannot be explained in terms of syllable contact. The rd &gt; dr shift is analyzed as an effect of the Obligatory Contour Principle, whereby adjacent segments identical in place, manner, and voicing specifications are prohibited. The second type involves the displacement of r toward the left edge of a word, also frequently attested in popular Modern Spanish. A comprehensive account of rhotic metathesis is developed, following recent work on position-specific constraint evaluation (Riggle and Wilson 2005) and segmental adjacency constraints (Carpenter 2002).</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="1354cc38c99e330d067eb790064c850d" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:32895113,&quot;asset_id&quot;:5914727,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/32895113/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="5914727"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="5914727"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 5914727; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=5914727]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=5914727]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 5914727; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='5914727']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 5914727, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "1354cc38c99e330d067eb790064c850d" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=5914727]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":5914727,"title":"Constraints on the metathesis of sonorant consonants in Judeo-Spanish","translated_title":"","metadata":{"doi":"10.1515/PROBUS.2007.006","issue":"2","volume":"19","abstract":"Judeo-Spanish denotes those varieties of Spanish preserved by the Sephardic Jews who were expelled from Spain in 1492 and have emigrated throughout Europe, North Africa, the Middle East, and the United States. This paper analyzes several types of sonorant consonant metathesis in Judeo-Spanish within the framework of Optimality Theory. Following Holt's (2004) account of Old Spanish, local metathesis of dl, dn, and nr clusters is analyzed as a repair strategy for bad syllable contact. A novel analysis is proposed in which nasal place assimilation and positional faithfulness constraints account for the failure of dm metathesis in morphologically derived environments. Judeo-Spanish also has two types of innovative rhotic metathesis that cannot be explained in terms of syllable contact. The rd \u003e dr shift is analyzed as an effect of the Obligatory Contour Principle, whereby adjacent segments identical in place, manner, and voicing specifications are prohibited. The second type involves the displacement of r toward the left edge of a word, also frequently attested in popular Modern Spanish. 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A novel analysis is proposed in which nasal place assimilation and positional faithfulness constraints account for the failure of dm metathesis in morphologically derived environments. Judeo-Spanish also has two types of innovative rhotic metathesis that cannot be explained in terms of syllable contact. The rd \u003e dr shift is analyzed as an effect of the Obligatory Contour Principle, whereby adjacent segments identical in place, manner, and voicing specifications are prohibited. The second type involves the displacement of r toward the left edge of a word, also frequently attested in popular Modern Spanish. 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$(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="38471482"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/38471482/Morphological_derived_environment_effects_in_gestural_coordination_A_case_study_of_Norwegian_clusters"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Morphological derived-environment effects in gestural coordination: A case study of Norwegian clusters" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/38471482/Morphological_derived_environment_effects_in_gestural_coordination_A_case_study_of_Norwegian_clusters">Morphological derived-environment effects in gestural coordination: A case study of Norwegian clusters</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Lingua</span><span>, 2007</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">This paper examines morphophonological alternations involving apicoalveolar tap-consonant cluster...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">This paper examines morphophonological alternations involving apicoalveolar tap-consonant clusters in Urban East Norwegian from the framework of gestural Optimality Theory. Articulatory Phonology provides an insightful explanation of patterns of vowel intrusion, coalescence, and rhotic deletion in terms of the temporal coordination of consonantal gestures, which interacts with both prosodic and morphological structure. An alignment-based account of derived-environment effects is proposed in which complete overlap in rhotic-consonant clusters is blocked within morphemes but not across morpheme or word boundaries. Alignment constraints on gestural coordination also play a role in phonologically conditioned allomorphy. The gestural analysis is contrasted with alternative Optimality-theoretic accounts. Furthermore, it is argued that models of the phonetics–phonology interface which view timing as a low-level detail of phonetic implementation incorrectly predict that input morphological structure should have no effect on gestural coordination. The patterning of rhotic-consonant clusters in Norwegian is consistent with a model that includes gestural representations and constraints directly in the phonological grammar, where underlying morphological structure is still visible. On the assumption that Universal Grammar lacks faithfulness constraints on input timing, the phonology is free to include non-contrastive phonetic detail such as intersegmental gestural coordination without the danger of overgenerating impossible contrasts.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="38471482"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="38471482"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 38471482; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=38471482]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=38471482]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 38471482; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='38471482']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 38471482, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=38471482]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":38471482,"title":"Morphological derived-environment effects in gestural coordination: A case study of Norwegian clusters","translated_title":"","metadata":{"doi":"10.1016/j.lingua.2006.05.004","issue":"6","volume":"117","abstract":"This paper examines morphophonological alternations involving apicoalveolar tap-consonant clusters in Urban East Norwegian from the framework of gestural Optimality Theory. Articulatory Phonology provides an insightful explanation of patterns of vowel intrusion, coalescence, and rhotic deletion in terms of the temporal coordination of consonantal gestures, which interacts with both prosodic and morphological structure. An alignment-based account of derived-environment effects is proposed in which complete overlap in rhotic-consonant clusters is blocked within morphemes but not across morpheme or word boundaries. Alignment constraints on gestural coordination also play a role in phonologically conditioned allomorphy. The gestural analysis is contrasted with alternative Optimality-theoretic accounts. Furthermore, it is argued that models of the phonetics–phonology interface which view timing as a low-level detail of phonetic implementation incorrectly predict that input morphological structure should have no effect on gestural coordination. The patterning of rhotic-consonant clusters in Norwegian is consistent with a model that includes gestural representations and constraints directly in the phonological grammar, where underlying morphological structure is still visible. On the assumption that Universal Grammar lacks faithfulness constraints on input timing, the phonology is free to include non-contrastive phonetic detail such as intersegmental gestural coordination without the danger of overgenerating impossible contrasts.\n\n","page_numbers":"950-985","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2007,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Lingua"},"translated_abstract":"This paper examines morphophonological alternations involving apicoalveolar tap-consonant clusters in Urban East Norwegian from the framework of gestural Optimality Theory. Articulatory Phonology provides an insightful explanation of patterns of vowel intrusion, coalescence, and rhotic deletion in terms of the temporal coordination of consonantal gestures, which interacts with both prosodic and morphological structure. An alignment-based account of derived-environment effects is proposed in which complete overlap in rhotic-consonant clusters is blocked within morphemes but not across morpheme or word boundaries. Alignment constraints on gestural coordination also play a role in phonologically conditioned allomorphy. The gestural analysis is contrasted with alternative Optimality-theoretic accounts. Furthermore, it is argued that models of the phonetics–phonology interface which view timing as a low-level detail of phonetic implementation incorrectly predict that input morphological structure should have no effect on gestural coordination. The patterning of rhotic-consonant clusters in Norwegian is consistent with a model that includes gestural representations and constraints directly in the phonological grammar, where underlying morphological structure is still visible. On the assumption that Universal Grammar lacks faithfulness constraints on input timing, the phonology is free to include non-contrastive phonetic detail such as intersegmental gestural coordination without the danger of overgenerating impossible contrasts.\n\n","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/38471482/Morphological_derived_environment_effects_in_gestural_coordination_A_case_study_of_Norwegian_clusters","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2019-03-02T22:46:50.842-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":8774974,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"Morphological_derived_environment_effects_in_gestural_coordination_A_case_study_of_Norwegian_clusters","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","owner":{"id":8774974,"first_name":"Travis","middle_initials":"G","last_name":"Bradley","page_name":"TravisBradley","domain_name":"ucdavis","created_at":"2014-02-01T16:29:50.303-08:00","display_name":"Travis G Bradley","url":"https://ucdavis.academia.edu/TravisBradley"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":1239,"name":"Phonology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Phonology"},{"id":16618,"name":"Optimality Theory","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Optimality_Theory"},{"id":74167,"name":"Rhotics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Rhotics"},{"id":300344,"name":"Norwegian Language","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Norwegian_Language"}],"urls":[{"id":8710453,"url":"http://escholarship.org/uc/item/5mn3w7gz"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="38477468"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/38477468/Prosodically_conditioned_Sibilant_Voicing_in_Balkan_Judeo_Spanish"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Prosodically-conditioned Sibilant Voicing in Balkan Judeo-Spanish" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/58543308/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/38477468/Prosodically_conditioned_Sibilant_Voicing_in_Balkan_Judeo_Spanish">Prosodically-conditioned Sibilant Voicing in Balkan Judeo-Spanish</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>In Erin Bainbridge and Brian Agbayani (eds.), Proceedings of the 34th Western Conference on Linguistics, 48-60. Fresno, CA: Department of Linguistics, California State University, Fresno</span><span>, 2007</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="57644f89ce74e3da0f03e7cb8e824162" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:58543308,&quot;asset_id&quot;:38477468,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/58543308/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="38477468"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="38477468"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 38477468; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=38477468]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=38477468]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 38477468; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='38477468']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 38477468, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "57644f89ce74e3da0f03e7cb8e824162" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=38477468]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":38477468,"title":"Prosodically-conditioned Sibilant Voicing in Balkan Judeo-Spanish","translated_title":"","metadata":{"publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2007,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"In Erin Bainbridge and Brian Agbayani (eds.), Proceedings of the 34th Western Conference on Linguistics, 48-60. 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$(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="38471492"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/38471492/Contrast_and_Markedness_in_Complex_Onset_Phonotactics"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Contrast and Markedness in Complex Onset Phonotactics" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/58536646/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/38471492/Contrast_and_Markedness_in_Complex_Onset_Phonotactics">Contrast and Markedness in Complex Onset Phonotactics</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Southwest Journal of Linguistics</span><span>, 2006</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">In many languages that permit coronal laterals to follow labial and velar stops in complex onsets...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">In many languages that permit coronal laterals to follow labial and velar stops in complex onsets, sequences of a coronal stop followed by a coronal lateral are prohibited. Standard accounts rule out coronal-lateral clusters as an effect of the Obligatory Contour Principle, but this approach cannot explain languages such as Mong Njua and Katu, which neutralize the coronal-velar place contrast but still allow the coronal-lateral clusters to appear. Recent work in Dispersion Theory (Flemming 1995, 2002, Padgett 2003a,b,c) has argued that Optimality Theory (Prince and Smolensky 1993/2004) must also include systemic constraints that evaluate phonological forms in the context of the larger system of contrasting forms in a language. This paper offers a new Dispersion-theoretic analysis of restrictions on onset clusters involving laterals. Systemic markedness constraints penalize indistinct coronal-velar contrasts in different pre-lateral contexts. Directionality of neutralization is determined by faithfulness constraints on input place, whose ranking can vary across languages and dialects (Hume 2003, Hume and Tserdandelis 2002). The proposed analysis solves problems with earlier accounts and also encompasses typological patterns from over forty languages, including velarization in early Romance sound change and Mexican Spanish loanword adaptations from Nahuatl.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="105dedea549a0bf00c213579b9fe246f" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:58536646,&quot;asset_id&quot;:38471492,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/58536646/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="38471492"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="38471492"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 38471492; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=38471492]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=38471492]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 38471492; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='38471492']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 38471492, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "105dedea549a0bf00c213579b9fe246f" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=38471492]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":38471492,"title":"Contrast and Markedness in Complex Onset Phonotactics","translated_title":"","metadata":{"issue":"1","volume":"25","abstract":"In many languages that permit coronal laterals to follow labial and velar stops in complex onsets, sequences of a coronal stop followed by a coronal lateral are prohibited. Standard accounts rule out coronal-lateral clusters as an effect of the Obligatory Contour Principle, but this approach cannot explain languages such as Mong Njua and Katu, which neutralize the coronal-velar place contrast but still allow the coronal-lateral clusters to appear. Recent work in Dispersion Theory (Flemming 1995, 2002, Padgett 2003a,b,c) has argued that Optimality Theory (Prince and Smolensky 1993/2004) must also include systemic constraints that evaluate phonological forms in the context of the larger system of contrasting forms in a language. This paper offers a new Dispersion-theoretic analysis of restrictions on onset clusters involving laterals. Systemic markedness constraints penalize indistinct coronal-velar contrasts in different pre-lateral contexts. Directionality of neutralization is determined by faithfulness constraints on input place, whose ranking can vary across languages and dialects (Hume 2003, Hume and Tserdandelis 2002). The proposed analysis solves problems with earlier accounts and also encompasses typological patterns from over forty languages, including velarization in early Romance sound change and Mexican Spanish loanword adaptations from Nahuatl.","page_numbers":"29-58","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2006,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Southwest Journal of Linguistics"},"translated_abstract":"In many languages that permit coronal laterals to follow labial and velar stops in complex onsets, sequences of a coronal stop followed by a coronal lateral are prohibited. Standard accounts rule out coronal-lateral clusters as an effect of the Obligatory Contour Principle, but this approach cannot explain languages such as Mong Njua and Katu, which neutralize the coronal-velar place contrast but still allow the coronal-lateral clusters to appear. Recent work in Dispersion Theory (Flemming 1995, 2002, Padgett 2003a,b,c) has argued that Optimality Theory (Prince and Smolensky 1993/2004) must also include systemic constraints that evaluate phonological forms in the context of the larger system of contrasting forms in a language. This paper offers a new Dispersion-theoretic analysis of restrictions on onset clusters involving laterals. Systemic markedness constraints penalize indistinct coronal-velar contrasts in different pre-lateral contexts. Directionality of neutralization is determined by faithfulness constraints on input place, whose ranking can vary across languages and dialects (Hume 2003, Hume and Tserdandelis 2002). The proposed analysis solves problems with earlier accounts and also encompasses typological patterns from over forty languages, including velarization in early Romance sound change and Mexican Spanish loanword adaptations from Nahuatl.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/38471492/Contrast_and_Markedness_in_Complex_Onset_Phonotactics","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2019-03-02T22:53:22.147-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":8774974,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":58536646,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/58536646/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Bradley_2006_Contrast_and_Markedness_in_Complex_Onset_Phonotactics.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/58536646/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Contrast_and_Markedness_in_Complex_Onset.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/58536646/Bradley_2006_Contrast_and_Markedness_in_Complex_Onset_Phonotactics-libre.pdf?1551770294=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DContrast_and_Markedness_in_Complex_Onset.pdf\u0026Expires=1732452381\u0026Signature=VNM1B~gQkEeM6z3yzWnxZsqzvzQYWEtHxQkM-SPG1a9VZeZ4VmlRyMVTm5Za12FeAJWT6P5stUY3dHww6U9yWeCe77TT7zgPeiK7jBSm5eTDT-GkH5WeTnBi22PXbn2GcmnkxomRETWLB-CBGiqFXTYJB3D7L5cJYhRN2dnBM1RbGCjgZz6m5LgPBmdZUCErR54awnHwGcJtYjsnWWYgp5vr-gYHw9zIXj9NnqvYYQ376NsEVam3ThpjebbKjgKN-XDQcYPMjm4K5REHnr6MpVR0hZtORMUET4wB9Jsen1uIxayluWd5XXjmmxv~teCUWfo8BVNZYKS1F7FQTLnYHw__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Contrast_and_Markedness_in_Complex_Onset_Phonotactics","translated_slug":"","page_count":30,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","owner":{"id":8774974,"first_name":"Travis","middle_initials":"G","last_name":"Bradley","page_name":"TravisBradley","domain_name":"ucdavis","created_at":"2014-02-01T16:29:50.303-08:00","display_name":"Travis G Bradley","url":"https://ucdavis.academia.edu/TravisBradley"},"attachments":[{"id":58536646,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/58536646/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Bradley_2006_Contrast_and_Markedness_in_Complex_Onset_Phonotactics.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/58536646/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Contrast_and_Markedness_in_Complex_Onset.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/58536646/Bradley_2006_Contrast_and_Markedness_in_Complex_Onset_Phonotactics-libre.pdf?1551770294=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DContrast_and_Markedness_in_Complex_Onset.pdf\u0026Expires=1732452381\u0026Signature=VNM1B~gQkEeM6z3yzWnxZsqzvzQYWEtHxQkM-SPG1a9VZeZ4VmlRyMVTm5Za12FeAJWT6P5stUY3dHww6U9yWeCe77TT7zgPeiK7jBSm5eTDT-GkH5WeTnBi22PXbn2GcmnkxomRETWLB-CBGiqFXTYJB3D7L5cJYhRN2dnBM1RbGCjgZz6m5LgPBmdZUCErR54awnHwGcJtYjsnWWYgp5vr-gYHw9zIXj9NnqvYYQ376NsEVam3ThpjebbKjgKN-XDQcYPMjm4K5REHnr6MpVR0hZtORMUET4wB9Jsen1uIxayluWd5XXjmmxv~teCUWfo8BVNZYKS1F7FQTLnYHw__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":1239,"name":"Phonology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Phonology"},{"id":12492,"name":"Spanish Linguistics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Spanish_Linguistics"},{"id":16618,"name":"Optimality Theory","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Optimality_Theory"},{"id":29859,"name":"Romance Linguistics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Romance_Linguistics"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> </div><div class="profile--tab_content_container js-tab-pane tab-pane" data-section-id="8960474" id="books"><div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="38470678"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/38470678/Fonolog%C3%ADa_generativa_contempor%C3%A1nea_de_la_lengua_espa%C3%B1ola_2a_edici%C3%B3n_"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Fonología generativa contemporánea de la lengua española (2a edición)" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/38470678/Fonolog%C3%ADa_generativa_contempor%C3%A1nea_de_la_lengua_espa%C3%B1ola_2a_edici%C3%B3n_">Fonología generativa contemporánea de la lengua española (2a edición)</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Núñez Cedeño, Rafael, Sonia Colina and Travis G. Bradley (eds.), Fonología generativa contemporánea de la lengua española (2a edición). Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press.</span><span>, 2014</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Fonología generativa contemporánea de la lengua española, in its extensively revised and updated ...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Fonología generativa contemporánea de la lengua española, in its extensively revised and updated second edition, shows how recent theoretical and methodological advances have enhanced our understanding of Spanish phonology.<br /><br />This comprehensive book, written completely in Spanish, introduces the latest concepts and principles of phonological analysis and applies these theories to the study of the Spanish language. This new edition includes new chapters on intonation and laboratory phonology and greatly expands the coverage of optimality theory. Exercises and further readings at the end of each chapter, as well as the volume&#39;s glossary of linguistic terminology, facilitate effective classroom use.<br /><br />This book is an essential reference for scholars of Spanish linguistics and will be required reading for advanced undergraduate and graduate students of Spanish. An answer key is available on the GU Press website for teachers only.<br /><br /><br />Table of Contents<br /><br />Introducción: La fonología <br />Pilar Prieto<br /><br />1. De la fonética descriptiva a los rasgos distintivos<br />Alfonso Morales-Front<br /><br />2. Fonología autosegmental <br />Rafael A. Núñez Cedeño<br /><br />3. Modelo autosegmental jerárquico <br />Rafael Núñez Cedeño<br /><br />4. Teoría de la subespecificación <br />Rafael Núñez Cedeño<br /><br />5. La silabificación en español <br />José I. Hualde<br /><br />6. La fonología léxica <br />Pilar Prieto<br /><br />7. El acento <br />Alfonso Morales-Front<br /><br />8. La entonación <br />José I. Hualde<br /><br />9. La teoría de la optimidad en la fonología del español <br />Sonia Colina<br /><br />10. Fonología de laboratorio <br />Travis G. Bradley<br /><br />Bibliografía<br />Colaboradores<br />Glosario<br />índice de temas y lenguas</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="38470678"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="38470678"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 38470678; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=38470678]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=38470678]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 38470678; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='38470678']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 38470678, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=38470678]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":38470678,"title":"Fonología generativa contemporánea de la lengua española (2a edición)","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Fonología generativa contemporánea de la lengua española, in its extensively revised and updated second edition, shows how recent theoretical and methodological advances have enhanced our understanding of Spanish phonology.\n\nThis comprehensive book, written completely in Spanish, introduces the latest concepts and principles of phonological analysis and applies these theories to the study of the Spanish language. This new edition includes new chapters on intonation and laboratory phonology and greatly expands the coverage of optimality theory. Exercises and further readings at the end of each chapter, as well as the volume's glossary of linguistic terminology, facilitate effective classroom use.\n\nThis book is an essential reference for scholars of Spanish linguistics and will be required reading for advanced undergraduate and graduate students of Spanish. An answer key is available on the GU Press website for teachers only.\n\n\nTable of Contents\n\nIntroducción: La fonología \nPilar Prieto\n\n1. De la fonética descriptiva a los rasgos distintivos\nAlfonso Morales-Front\n\n2. Fonología autosegmental \nRafael A. Núñez Cedeño\n\n3. Modelo autosegmental jerárquico \nRafael Núñez Cedeño\n\n4. Teoría de la subespecificación \nRafael Núñez Cedeño\n\n5. La silabificación en español \nJosé I. Hualde\n\n6. La fonología léxica \nPilar Prieto\n\n7. El acento \nAlfonso Morales-Front\n\n8. La entonación \nJosé I. Hualde\n\n9. La teoría de la optimidad en la fonología del español \nSonia Colina\n\n10. Fonología de laboratorio \nTravis G. Bradley\n\nBibliografía\nColaboradores\nGlosario\níndice de temas y lenguas\n\n\n\n\n\n","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2014,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Núñez Cedeño, Rafael, Sonia Colina and Travis G. Bradley (eds.), Fonología generativa contemporánea de la lengua española (2a edición). Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press."},"translated_abstract":"Fonología generativa contemporánea de la lengua española, in its extensively revised and updated second edition, shows how recent theoretical and methodological advances have enhanced our understanding of Spanish phonology.\n\nThis comprehensive book, written completely in Spanish, introduces the latest concepts and principles of phonological analysis and applies these theories to the study of the Spanish language. This new edition includes new chapters on intonation and laboratory phonology and greatly expands the coverage of optimality theory. Exercises and further readings at the end of each chapter, as well as the volume's glossary of linguistic terminology, facilitate effective classroom use.\n\nThis book is an essential reference for scholars of Spanish linguistics and will be required reading for advanced undergraduate and graduate students of Spanish. An answer key is available on the GU Press website for teachers only.\n\n\nTable of Contents\n\nIntroducción: La fonología \nPilar Prieto\n\n1. De la fonética descriptiva a los rasgos distintivos\nAlfonso Morales-Front\n\n2. Fonología autosegmental \nRafael A. Núñez Cedeño\n\n3. Modelo autosegmental jerárquico \nRafael Núñez Cedeño\n\n4. Teoría de la subespecificación \nRafael Núñez Cedeño\n\n5. La silabificación en español \nJosé I. Hualde\n\n6. La fonología léxica \nPilar Prieto\n\n7. El acento \nAlfonso Morales-Front\n\n8. La entonación \nJosé I. Hualde\n\n9. La teoría de la optimidad en la fonología del español \nSonia Colina\n\n10. Fonología de laboratorio \nTravis G. Bradley\n\nBibliografía\nColaboradores\nGlosario\níndice de temas y lenguas\n\n\n\n\n\n","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/38470678/Fonolog%C3%ADa_generativa_contempor%C3%A1nea_de_la_lengua_espa%C3%B1ola_2a_edici%C3%B3n_","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2019-03-02T22:05:11.675-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":8774974,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"book","co_author_tags":[{"id":39352827,"work_id":38470678,"tagging_user_id":8774974,"tagged_user_id":8000937,"co_author_invite_id":null,"email":"r***z@sbcglobal.net","affiliation":"University of Illinois at Chicago","display_order":0,"name":"Rafael Nunez","title":"Fonología generativa contemporánea de la lengua española (2a edición)"},{"id":39352828,"work_id":38470678,"tagging_user_id":8774974,"tagged_user_id":176682765,"co_author_invite_id":null,"email":"m***s@georgetown.edu","display_order":4194304,"name":"Alfonso Morales-Front","title":"Fonología generativa contemporánea de la lengua española (2a edición)"}],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"Fonología_generativa_contemporánea_de_la_lengua_española_2a_edición_","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","owner":{"id":8774974,"first_name":"Travis","middle_initials":"G","last_name":"Bradley","page_name":"TravisBradley","domain_name":"ucdavis","created_at":"2014-02-01T16:29:50.303-08:00","display_name":"Travis G Bradley","url":"https://ucdavis.academia.edu/TravisBradley"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":1239,"name":"Phonology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Phonology"},{"id":12492,"name":"Spanish Linguistics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Spanish_Linguistics"},{"id":52353,"name":"Generative linguistics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Generative_linguistics"}],"urls":[{"id":8710431,"url":"http://press.georgetown.edu/book/languages/fonolog%C3%ADa-generativa-contempor%C3%A1nea-de-la-lengua-espa%C3%B1ola"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> </div><div class="profile--tab_content_container js-tab-pane tab-pane" data-section-id="8962006" id="thesischapters"><div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="38477705"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/38477705/The_phonetics_and_phonology_of_rhotic_duration_contrast_and_neutralization"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of The phonetics and phonology of rhotic duration contrast and neutralization" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/58543597/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/38477705/The_phonetics_and_phonology_of_rhotic_duration_contrast_and_neutralization">The phonetics and phonology of rhotic duration contrast and neutralization</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Ph.D. thesis</span><span>, 2001</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">A number of the world&#39;s languages exhibit a phonological duration-based contrast between an extra...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">A number of the world&#39;s languages exhibit a phonological duration-based contrast between an extra-short coronal tap and a sustainable multiple-cycle trill. Relevant data from Spanish, Catalan, European Portuguese, Basque, Sebei, Kaliai-Kove, Kairiru, Palauan, Kurdish, and Ngizim suggest an implicational hierarchy of the form intervocalic &lt; word-initial &lt; elsewhere (word-final, pre- and postconsonantal), where contrast in a given position entails contrast in positions to the left. This dissertation develops a comprehensive analysis of the positional neutralization of rhotic duration contrast. Chapter 1 introduces the analytical framework of phonetically-based Optimality Theory, focusing specifically on Correspondence Theory, the Dispersion Theory of contrast, Segmental Autonomy, and Licensing by Cue, and then previews proposed analysis. Chapter 2 demonstrates how contemporary generative accounts have consistently invoked syllable structure and/or sonority in attempts to explain the distribution of the tap and trill in Spanish. However, data from languages beyond Spanish show that not all aspects of the behavior of these rhotics can be adequately captured with reference to syllable structure alone. Chapter 3 develops an account of the rhotic duration typology, with Spanish serving as the primary example. On this account, phonetic and phonological constraints interact directly to determine the surface distribution of rhotics without reference to syllable boundaries. Since reference to syllable structure is unnecessary, the analysis does not face the same difficulties as existing prosodic accounts when data beyond Spanish are taken into consideration. Chapter 4 presents an empirical survey of languages beyond the Iberian Romance family and documents several heretofore unnoticed generalizations regarding the positional neutralization of rhotic duration contrast. These generalizations follow straightforwardly as a consequence of constraint interaction under the phonetically-based OT analysis developed in Chapter 3. Finally, Chapter 5 treats issues of phonological representation by focusing on the ambiguous nature of the surface trill, which patterns sometimes as a single unit and sometimes as a cluster of taps. It is argued that a morphologically-derived sequence of taps is neutralized to trill by dint of a targeted constraint enforcing coalescence of adjacent rhotics. Chapter 5 concludes by summarizing the main results of the dissertation and by outlining some issues for future research.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="85b157daee73d06fe67a70a2df1b7704" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:58543597,&quot;asset_id&quot;:38477705,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/58543597/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="38477705"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="38477705"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 38477705; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=38477705]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=38477705]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 38477705; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='38477705']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 38477705, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "85b157daee73d06fe67a70a2df1b7704" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=38477705]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":38477705,"title":"The phonetics and phonology of rhotic duration contrast and neutralization","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"A number of the world's languages exhibit a phonological duration-based contrast between an extra-short coronal tap and a sustainable multiple-cycle trill. Relevant data from Spanish, Catalan, European Portuguese, Basque, Sebei, Kaliai-Kove, Kairiru, Palauan, Kurdish, and Ngizim suggest an implicational hierarchy of the form intervocalic \u003c word-initial \u003c elsewhere (word-final, pre- and postconsonantal), where contrast in a given position entails contrast in positions to the left. This dissertation develops a comprehensive analysis of the positional neutralization of rhotic duration contrast. Chapter 1 introduces the analytical framework of phonetically-based Optimality Theory, focusing specifically on Correspondence Theory, the Dispersion Theory of contrast, Segmental Autonomy, and Licensing by Cue, and then previews proposed analysis. Chapter 2 demonstrates how contemporary generative accounts have consistently invoked syllable structure and/or sonority in attempts to explain the distribution of the tap and trill in Spanish. However, data from languages beyond Spanish show that not all aspects of the behavior of these rhotics can be adequately captured with reference to syllable structure alone. Chapter 3 develops an account of the rhotic duration typology, with Spanish serving as the primary example. On this account, phonetic and phonological constraints interact directly to determine the surface distribution of rhotics without reference to syllable boundaries. Since reference to syllable structure is unnecessary, the analysis does not face the same difficulties as existing prosodic accounts when data beyond Spanish are taken into consideration. Chapter 4 presents an empirical survey of languages beyond the Iberian Romance family and documents several heretofore unnoticed generalizations regarding the positional neutralization of rhotic duration contrast. These generalizations follow straightforwardly as a consequence of constraint interaction under the phonetically-based OT analysis developed in Chapter 3. Finally, Chapter 5 treats issues of phonological representation by focusing on the ambiguous nature of the surface trill, which patterns sometimes as a single unit and sometimes as a cluster of taps. It is argued that a morphologically-derived sequence of taps is neutralized to trill by dint of a targeted constraint enforcing coalescence of adjacent rhotics. Chapter 5 concludes by summarizing the main results of the dissertation and by outlining some issues for future research.","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2001,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Ph.D. thesis"},"translated_abstract":"A number of the world's languages exhibit a phonological duration-based contrast between an extra-short coronal tap and a sustainable multiple-cycle trill. Relevant data from Spanish, Catalan, European Portuguese, Basque, Sebei, Kaliai-Kove, Kairiru, Palauan, Kurdish, and Ngizim suggest an implicational hierarchy of the form intervocalic \u003c word-initial \u003c elsewhere (word-final, pre- and postconsonantal), where contrast in a given position entails contrast in positions to the left. This dissertation develops a comprehensive analysis of the positional neutralization of rhotic duration contrast. Chapter 1 introduces the analytical framework of phonetically-based Optimality Theory, focusing specifically on Correspondence Theory, the Dispersion Theory of contrast, Segmental Autonomy, and Licensing by Cue, and then previews proposed analysis. Chapter 2 demonstrates how contemporary generative accounts have consistently invoked syllable structure and/or sonority in attempts to explain the distribution of the tap and trill in Spanish. However, data from languages beyond Spanish show that not all aspects of the behavior of these rhotics can be adequately captured with reference to syllable structure alone. Chapter 3 develops an account of the rhotic duration typology, with Spanish serving as the primary example. On this account, phonetic and phonological constraints interact directly to determine the surface distribution of rhotics without reference to syllable boundaries. Since reference to syllable structure is unnecessary, the analysis does not face the same difficulties as existing prosodic accounts when data beyond Spanish are taken into consideration. Chapter 4 presents an empirical survey of languages beyond the Iberian Romance family and documents several heretofore unnoticed generalizations regarding the positional neutralization of rhotic duration contrast. These generalizations follow straightforwardly as a consequence of constraint interaction under the phonetically-based OT analysis developed in Chapter 3. Finally, Chapter 5 treats issues of phonological representation by focusing on the ambiguous nature of the surface trill, which patterns sometimes as a single unit and sometimes as a cluster of taps. It is argued that a morphologically-derived sequence of taps is neutralized to trill by dint of a targeted constraint enforcing coalescence of adjacent rhotics. Chapter 5 concludes by summarizing the main results of the dissertation and by outlining some issues for future research.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/38477705/The_phonetics_and_phonology_of_rhotic_duration_contrast_and_neutralization","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2019-03-03T16:47:12.560-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":8774974,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"draft","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":58543597,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/58543597/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"bradley2001_diss.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/58543597/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"The_phonetics_and_phonology_of_rhotic_du.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/58543597/bradley2001_diss-libre.pdf?1551724248=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DThe_phonetics_and_phonology_of_rhotic_du.pdf\u0026Expires=1732452382\u0026Signature=ex4MM6YkKA2~cjcTvcuM0VnhrySl3JlNMq3AfxbO7W2l5ESm9Ie1rBLwv6lQ8Gg82Wzk24ARDtZtWrj5qgBPZ95thG~VbKpyxLvrAYweJnWkNr23j28X1EKfr8e~2LorcFvF8J9nl8r~CuXYmAGGjZp9kv-KF0cJUJawQn~ETo0psAEUllEu6SJAUEdZ2sUi6y9COd46Gg~1BimmYZBtt7~h5o8wflUnC5W~7CQF7a2-mILWEEOo4PX4~efvqnOjqZlogfee-TdHl1mLqhZulUQEx7xhUN~asHkgjpEBMQFr5f5LIw5y9l4NOth-hDdRRiZnDMnQ7JOmPr6T-~1-MQ__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"The_phonetics_and_phonology_of_rhotic_duration_contrast_and_neutralization","translated_slug":"","page_count":328,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","owner":{"id":8774974,"first_name":"Travis","middle_initials":"G","last_name":"Bradley","page_name":"TravisBradley","domain_name":"ucdavis","created_at":"2014-02-01T16:29:50.303-08:00","display_name":"Travis G Bradley","url":"https://ucdavis.academia.edu/TravisBradley"},"attachments":[{"id":58543597,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/58543597/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"bradley2001_diss.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/58543597/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"The_phonetics_and_phonology_of_rhotic_du.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/58543597/bradley2001_diss-libre.pdf?1551724248=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DThe_phonetics_and_phonology_of_rhotic_du.pdf\u0026Expires=1732452382\u0026Signature=ex4MM6YkKA2~cjcTvcuM0VnhrySl3JlNMq3AfxbO7W2l5ESm9Ie1rBLwv6lQ8Gg82Wzk24ARDtZtWrj5qgBPZ95thG~VbKpyxLvrAYweJnWkNr23j28X1EKfr8e~2LorcFvF8J9nl8r~CuXYmAGGjZp9kv-KF0cJUJawQn~ETo0psAEUllEu6SJAUEdZ2sUi6y9COd46Gg~1BimmYZBtt7~h5o8wflUnC5W~7CQF7a2-mILWEEOo4PX4~efvqnOjqZlogfee-TdHl1mLqhZulUQEx7xhUN~asHkgjpEBMQFr5f5LIw5y9l4NOth-hDdRRiZnDMnQ7JOmPr6T-~1-MQ__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":1239,"name":"Phonology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Phonology"},{"id":2139,"name":"Phonetics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Phonetics"},{"id":12492,"name":"Spanish Linguistics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Spanish_Linguistics"},{"id":16618,"name":"Optimality Theory","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Optimality_Theory"},{"id":74167,"name":"Rhotics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Rhotics"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> </div><div class="profile--tab_content_container js-tab-pane tab-pane" data-section-id="20112163" id="conferencepresentations"><div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="124992969"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/124992969/Sibilant_Place_Alternations_in_Romance"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Sibilant Place Alternations in Romance" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/119115613/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/124992969/Sibilant_Place_Alternations_in_Romance">Sibilant Place Alternations in Romance</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Linguistic Symposium on Romance Languages (LSRL)</span><span>, 2014</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">This talk focuses on patterns of /s/-retraction and debuccalization. I establish typological gene...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">This talk focuses on patterns of /s/-retraction and debuccalization. I establish typological generalizations about retraction and debuccalization of preconsonantal /s/ in Romance. Then, I motivate a phonetically-based account of these generalizations in Optimality Theory. Finally, I consider theoretical implications and extensions of the account, with a specific focus on (i) the conspiracy of coda /s/-lenition rules and (ii) coalescence of complex codas in Judeo-Spanish.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="ed0b0e404c6770fd1f65951701fe19ff" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:119115613,&quot;asset_id&quot;:124992969,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/119115613/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="124992969"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="124992969"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 124992969; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=124992969]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=124992969]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 124992969; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='124992969']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 124992969, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "ed0b0e404c6770fd1f65951701fe19ff" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=124992969]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":124992969,"title":"Sibilant Place Alternations in Romance","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"This talk focuses on patterns of /s/-retraction and debuccalization. I establish typological generalizations about retraction and debuccalization of preconsonantal /s/ in Romance. Then, I motivate a phonetically-based account of these generalizations in Optimality Theory. Finally, I consider theoretical implications and extensions of the account, with a specific focus on (i) the conspiracy of coda /s/-lenition rules and (ii) coalescence of complex codas in Judeo-Spanish.","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2014,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Linguistic Symposium on Romance Languages (LSRL)"},"translated_abstract":"This talk focuses on patterns of /s/-retraction and debuccalization. I establish typological generalizations about retraction and debuccalization of preconsonantal /s/ in Romance. Then, I motivate a phonetically-based account of these generalizations in Optimality Theory. 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$(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="124992273"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/124992273/Phonological_Asymmetries_in_the_Evolution_of_Palatal_Sonorants_in_Judeo_Spanish"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Phonological Asymmetries in the Evolution of Palatal Sonorants in Judeo-Spanish" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/119115091/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/124992273/Phonological_Asymmetries_in_the_Evolution_of_Palatal_Sonorants_in_Judeo_Spanish">Phonological Asymmetries in the Evolution of Palatal Sonorants in Judeo-Spanish</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Hispanic Linguistics Symposium</span><span>, 2016</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Drawing from linguistic descriptions of Judeo-Spanish dialects, this study documents systematic m...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Drawing from linguistic descriptions of Judeo-Spanish dialects, this study documents systematic microvariation in the evolution of palatal sonorants /ɲ/ and /ʎ/ inherited from Old Spanish, as compared to standard Castilian Spanish. Several phonological asymmetries are accounted for in terms of different rankings of universal markedness and faithfulness constraints in Optimality Theory.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="7c368be98f853a364858b47774429ad4" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:119115091,&quot;asset_id&quot;:124992273,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/119115091/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="124992273"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="124992273"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 124992273; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=124992273]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=124992273]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 124992273; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='124992273']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 124992273, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "7c368be98f853a364858b47774429ad4" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=124992273]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":124992273,"title":"Phonological Asymmetries in the Evolution of Palatal Sonorants in Judeo-Spanish","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Drawing from linguistic descriptions of Judeo-Spanish dialects, this study documents systematic microvariation in the evolution of palatal sonorants /ɲ/ and /ʎ/ inherited from Old Spanish, as compared to standard Castilian Spanish. 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$(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="124992034"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/124992034/Syllable_Merger_in_Moroccan_Judeo_Spanish"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Syllable Merger in Moroccan Judeo-Spanish" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/119114936/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/124992034/Syllable_Merger_in_Moroccan_Judeo_Spanish">Syllable Merger in Moroccan Judeo-Spanish</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Hispanic Linguistics Symposium</span><span>, 2024</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">We examine how sequences of two vowels across a word boundary were pronounced in early 20th-centu...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">We examine how sequences of two vowels across a word boundary were pronounced in early 20th-century Moroccan Judeo-Spanish (MJS), also known as haketía. We sketch a phonological analysis of MJS syllable merger within the contemporary linguistic framework of Optimality Theory.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="88f0457ba6a3db7a4160ca060b4f18e8" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:119114936,&quot;asset_id&quot;:124992034,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/119114936/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="124992034"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="124992034"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 124992034; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=124992034]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=124992034]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 124992034; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='124992034']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 124992034, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "88f0457ba6a3db7a4160ca060b4f18e8" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=124992034]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":124992034,"title":"Syllable Merger in Moroccan Judeo-Spanish","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"We examine how sequences of two vowels across a word boundary were pronounced in early 20th-century Moroccan Judeo-Spanish (MJS), also known as haketía. 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$(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="124991821"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/124991821/Rhotic_Contrast_and_Neutralization_in_Judeo_Spanish"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Rhotic Contrast and Neutralization in Judeo-Spanish" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/119114797/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/124991821/Rhotic_Contrast_and_Neutralization_in_Judeo_Spanish">Rhotic Contrast and Neutralization in Judeo-Spanish</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Hispanic Linguistics Symposium</span><span>, 2024</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">This study proposes an analysis in Optimality Theory of the phonological status and distribution ...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">This study proposes an analysis in Optimality Theory of the phonological status and distribution of rhotic consonants across Judeo-Spanish varieties, as compared to Northern Central Peninsular Spanish.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="9a345faf708e6fc6050d8e2893fef6e7" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:119114797,&quot;asset_id&quot;:124991821,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/119114797/download_file?st=MTczMjQ1OTA1NCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="124991821"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="124991821"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 124991821; 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