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Pt. 1 | What is CVCV? | |
Ch. 1 | Introduction | |
Ch. 2 | Open versus closed syllables in CVCV | |
Ch. 3 | A unified theory of vowel - zero alternations | |
Ch. 4 | Alternating vowels are present in the lexicon | |
Ch. 5 | The beginning of the word : "#" = CV | |
Ch. 6 | The coda mirror | |
Ch. 7 | Consequences of the coda mirror : no confusion between government and licensing anymore | |
Ch. 8 | A syntax of phonology | |
Ch. 9 | Lateral relations are head-final : length in phonology | |
Ch. 10 | Syllabic and trapped consonants in CVCV | |
Pt. 2 | Why CVCV? | |
Ch. 1 | Introduction | |
Ch. 2 | Principles of argumentation I : disjunctive contexts | |
Ch. 3 | Principles of argumentation II : representations and their function | |
Ch. 4 | Principles of argumentation III : generality of processes | |
Ch. 5 | Principles of argumentation IV : a better solution for extrasyllabicity than extrasyllabicity | |
Ch. 6 | Argument one : languages without initial restrictions | |
Ch. 7 | Argument two : what you get is NOT what you see : Tina Turner was wrong | |
Ch. 8 | Argument three : description vs. explanation of restrictions on word-initial consonant clusters | |
Ch. 9 | Argument four : lower : empty nuclei and regressive internuclear relations have been used for over 30 years in the analysis of Slavic vowel-zero alternations | |
Ch. 10 | Argument five : the life of "yers" outside of Slavic and in locations where vowels do not alternate with zero | |
Ch. 11 | Argument six : unified representations for the syllable and stress | |
Ch. 12 | Argument seven : licensing power of final empty nuclei parameterised : paired vs. impaired behaviour of internal and final codas | |
Ch. 13 | Argument eight : the coda mirror | |
Ch. 14 | Argument nine : news from the yer context : what happens in codas and before an unpronounced alternating vowel | |
Ch. 15 | Argument ten : what sonorants do in codas : a unified theory of melodic reaction on positional plight |
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Add A Syntagmatic Theory of Phonology 1 : What Is CVCV, and Why Should It Be?, Scheer (linguistics, Universite Nice, France) presents a development of Jean Lowenstamm's idea that phonological constituent structure can be reduced to a strict sequence of non-branching Onsets and non-branching Nuclei—an approach which is known as CVCV,, A Syntagmatic Theory of Phonology 1 : What Is CVCV, and Why Should It Be? to the inventory that you are selling on WonderClubX
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Add A Syntagmatic Theory of Phonology 1 : What Is CVCV, and Why Should It Be?, Scheer (linguistics, Universite Nice, France) presents a development of Jean Lowenstamm's idea that phonological constituent structure can be reduced to a strict sequence of non-branching Onsets and non-branching Nuclei—an approach which is known as CVCV,, A Syntagmatic Theory of Phonology 1 : What Is CVCV, and Why Should It Be? to your collection on WonderClub |