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Liquid Dissimilation in Bavarian German

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 March 2009

Tracy Alan Hall*
Affiliation:
Indiana University
*
Department of Germanic Studies, Ballantine Hall 644, Indiana University, 1020 Kirkwood Avenue, Bloomington, IN 47405–7103, [tahall2@indiana.edu]

Abstract

The present study investigates the instability of adjacent liquids in a variety of Southern Bavarian German. The focus is a synchronic process converting /r/ to [d] before or after /l/—a process argued to involve a dissimilation of the phonological feature [liquid], which itself is triggered by a specific OCP constraint, *[liquid][liquid]. In addition to providing evidence for the feature [liquid], the present article also supports a model of segment structure in which the traditional feature [sonorant] is replaced with the privative node [Sonorant Voice] (SV). The Bavarian dialect also displays a number of OCP-motivated constraints that ban other sequences of identical manner features, namely, [continuant], [nasal], [strident].*

Type
ARTICLES
Copyright
Copyright © Society for Germanic Linguistics 2009

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