Abstract Generalizations about relative prosodic boundary strength are recursive. Initial evidence comes from the fragment of English consisting only of proper names and and and or. A systematic relation between the semantics, the syntactic combi-natorics, and the prosodic phrasing of coordinate structures can be captured by re-cursively building up their prosody, in tandem with assembling their compositional meaning. Alternative edge-based approaches to prosodic phrasing fail to capture the recursive nature of the generalization, a result independent of whether or not prosodic representation itself is assumed to be recursive. The pattern generalizes beyond the grammar of coordination, despite two types of apparent counterexamples: Structur...
Chapter 5 in Time and Again: Theoretical perspectives on formal linguistics, edited by William D. Le...
International audienceOur ideas about prosodic representation are heavily influenced by our knowledg...
In this article we uphold the claim that there cannot be syntax without prosody. More specifically, ...
This paper argues that generalizations about prosodic phrasing are recursive in nature. Initial evid...
It is widely agreed that prosodic constituents should mirror syntactic constituents (unless high-ran...
Pinker and Jackendoff (2005: 10): “…(As mentioned, HCF use “recursion ” in the loose sense of concat...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Linguistics and Philosophy, 2005.In...
In this article, a prosodic domain located between the prosodic word and the phonological phrase is ...
There is a longstanding debate in the literature about if, and where, recursion occurs in prosodic s...
Prosodic boundaries can be used to disambiguate the syntactic structure of coordinated name sequence...
This article provides an overview of current and historically important issues in the study of the s...
Taking Chomsky's Syntactic Structures as a starting point, this paper explores the use of recursive ...
This paper focuses on prosodic adjunction at the Prosodic Word level in a polysynthetic language. I ...
Language is composed of complex grammatical structures that learners must make sense of in order to ...
Chomsky and Halle (1968) derive prosody and phonological domains by an algorithm that recursively op...
Chapter 5 in Time and Again: Theoretical perspectives on formal linguistics, edited by William D. Le...
International audienceOur ideas about prosodic representation are heavily influenced by our knowledg...
In this article we uphold the claim that there cannot be syntax without prosody. More specifically, ...
This paper argues that generalizations about prosodic phrasing are recursive in nature. Initial evid...
It is widely agreed that prosodic constituents should mirror syntactic constituents (unless high-ran...
Pinker and Jackendoff (2005: 10): “…(As mentioned, HCF use “recursion ” in the loose sense of concat...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Linguistics and Philosophy, 2005.In...
In this article, a prosodic domain located between the prosodic word and the phonological phrase is ...
There is a longstanding debate in the literature about if, and where, recursion occurs in prosodic s...
Prosodic boundaries can be used to disambiguate the syntactic structure of coordinated name sequence...
This article provides an overview of current and historically important issues in the study of the s...
Taking Chomsky's Syntactic Structures as a starting point, this paper explores the use of recursive ...
This paper focuses on prosodic adjunction at the Prosodic Word level in a polysynthetic language. I ...
Language is composed of complex grammatical structures that learners must make sense of in order to ...
Chomsky and Halle (1968) derive prosody and phonological domains by an algorithm that recursively op...
Chapter 5 in Time and Again: Theoretical perspectives on formal linguistics, edited by William D. Le...
International audienceOur ideas about prosodic representation are heavily influenced by our knowledg...
In this article we uphold the claim that there cannot be syntax without prosody. More specifically, ...