Similar phonological processes can be governed by different constraints. Davis (1995) claims that the effect of such process-specific constraints cannot be obtained in Optimality Theory (OT), exemplifying this point with material from harmony in Palestinian Arabic. On the contrary, I show that process-specific constraints are a natural and expected result of constraint ranking, the fundamental idea of OT. Furthermore, OT makes a restrictive prediction, the subset criterion, about coexistent process-specific constraints within a single grammar—a prediction supported by the Palestinian material. Davis also presents evidence that epenthetic segments have featural specifications, claiming that OT says they are featureless. This is incorrect; OT...
Opaque interactions between phonological processes (Kiparsky 1973) can be a significant challenge to...
This thesis conducts a formal comparison of Optimality Theoretic phonology with its predecessor, Rul...
The classical constraints used in phonological theory apply to a single candidate at a time. Yet, so...
Similar phonological processes can be governed by different constraints. Davis (1995) claims that th...
Optimality Theory (OT) is committed to a view of phonology where significant generalizations are pla...
Optimality Theory (Prince and Smolensky 1993) makes the claim that well-formedness constraints are r...
This work develops a conception of grammar in which optimality with respect to a set of constraints ...
We develop an extensible description logic for stating the content of optimalitytheoretic constraint...
Optimality Theory, like Lexical Phonology before it, applies phonological constraints (or processes)...
Optimality Theory in Phonology: A Reader is a collection of readings on this important new theory by...
It has been argued that rule-based phonological descriptions can uniformaly be expressed as mappings...
All languages make the same phonological generalisations. This is the re-markable claim of Optimalit...
This book describes Optimality Theory from the top down, explaining and exploring the central premis...
Is Optimality Theory a constraining theory? A formal analysis shows that it is, if two auxiliary ass...
In Optimality Theory, the phonological grammar of each language is a particular ranking of a set of ...
Opaque interactions between phonological processes (Kiparsky 1973) can be a significant challenge to...
This thesis conducts a formal comparison of Optimality Theoretic phonology with its predecessor, Rul...
The classical constraints used in phonological theory apply to a single candidate at a time. Yet, so...
Similar phonological processes can be governed by different constraints. Davis (1995) claims that th...
Optimality Theory (OT) is committed to a view of phonology where significant generalizations are pla...
Optimality Theory (Prince and Smolensky 1993) makes the claim that well-formedness constraints are r...
This work develops a conception of grammar in which optimality with respect to a set of constraints ...
We develop an extensible description logic for stating the content of optimalitytheoretic constraint...
Optimality Theory, like Lexical Phonology before it, applies phonological constraints (or processes)...
Optimality Theory in Phonology: A Reader is a collection of readings on this important new theory by...
It has been argued that rule-based phonological descriptions can uniformaly be expressed as mappings...
All languages make the same phonological generalisations. This is the re-markable claim of Optimalit...
This book describes Optimality Theory from the top down, explaining and exploring the central premis...
Is Optimality Theory a constraining theory? A formal analysis shows that it is, if two auxiliary ass...
In Optimality Theory, the phonological grammar of each language is a particular ranking of a set of ...
Opaque interactions between phonological processes (Kiparsky 1973) can be a significant challenge to...
This thesis conducts a formal comparison of Optimality Theoretic phonology with its predecessor, Rul...
The classical constraints used in phonological theory apply to a single candidate at a time. Yet, so...