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Syntagmatic distinctness in consonant deletion

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 October 2004

Marie-Hélène Côté
Affiliation:
University of Ottawa

Abstract

This article examines the role of distinctness between adjacent segments in consonant deletion. On the basis of five stop-deletion patterns, it establishes a correlation between the likelihood of cluster simplification and the level of similarity between the consonants in the cluster. This correlation is motivated on perceptual grounds, and an OT analysis of similarity avoidance is provided in which perceptual factors are integrated in the grammar through both faithfulness and markedness constraints. This perceptual approach improves in two ways on previous analyses, notably the OCP. First, it integrates similarity avoidance within a more general perception-based framework, which accounts naturally for its gradient nature. Second, it uncovers a distinction between absolute and contextual similarity avoidance between adjacent segments, depending on whether similarity avoidance is established without reference to the context in which the segments appear or relative to the quality of the perceptual cues available to the segments.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2004 Cambridge University Press

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Footnotes

I would like to thank Michael Kenstowicz and Cheryl Zoll for commenting on earlier versions of this work, as well as audiences at the symposium on the role of similarity in phonology (LSA 2001) and the 2002 Montréal–Ottawa–Toronto phonology workshop. The paper has also benefited from constructive remarks from three anonymous reviewers and the associate editor. This research was partially supported by a doctoral fellowship from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada.