Nasality in Kwawu is distinctive in vowels but predictable in consonants. This uncommon distribution is interpreted here in prosodic terms. It is claimed that the feature [+nasal] is represented on morae rather than on individual segments. The assignment of the feature [+nasal] is integrated with syllabification rules, which explains the prosodic characteristics of nasality. Further evidence is drawn from the distribution of nasality in reduplicated forms; the moraic representation of the feature [+nasal] is crucial for the analysis of reduplicated CV stems
This thesis proposes a merger of voicing and nasality under a single phonological feature. One main ...
We investigate the phonotactic behaviour of nasal consonants in a database of over 200 languages. Ou...
While sociophonetic research has made great progress in understanding the phonetic and social mechan...
This article describes and analyses nasal harmony (or spreading of nasality) in Awetí. It first show...
This paper considers the phonological representation of nasals in Japanese; unlike the majority of o...
International audienceThis paper presents a descriptive study of nasals and nasal harmony in Ikwere,...
The oral-nasal contrast is present in many languages (Hockett 1955, Ferguson 1966, Maddieson 1986). ...
This article reconsiders the nature and representation of the moraic nasal N in Japanese dialects, w...
It is widely acknowledged that certain feature combinations are more likely to occur than others. Fo...
Northern Pame nasal stops manifest a [-nasal] secondary feature (i.e. prestopping and poststopping) ...
This thesis presents an analysis of the phonological processes that affect contiguous nasal and obst...
This paper addresses the question: why are some consonants more resistant to nasalization than other...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology, 2006.This electronic versio...
(in English) Many studies in Czech or other languages studied variability. However, these studies we...
Although much is known about the linguistic function of vowel nasality, either contrastive (as in Fr...
This thesis proposes a merger of voicing and nasality under a single phonological feature. One main ...
We investigate the phonotactic behaviour of nasal consonants in a database of over 200 languages. Ou...
While sociophonetic research has made great progress in understanding the phonetic and social mechan...
This article describes and analyses nasal harmony (or spreading of nasality) in Awetí. It first show...
This paper considers the phonological representation of nasals in Japanese; unlike the majority of o...
International audienceThis paper presents a descriptive study of nasals and nasal harmony in Ikwere,...
The oral-nasal contrast is present in many languages (Hockett 1955, Ferguson 1966, Maddieson 1986). ...
This article reconsiders the nature and representation of the moraic nasal N in Japanese dialects, w...
It is widely acknowledged that certain feature combinations are more likely to occur than others. Fo...
Northern Pame nasal stops manifest a [-nasal] secondary feature (i.e. prestopping and poststopping) ...
This thesis presents an analysis of the phonological processes that affect contiguous nasal and obst...
This paper addresses the question: why are some consonants more resistant to nasalization than other...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology, 2006.This electronic versio...
(in English) Many studies in Czech or other languages studied variability. However, these studies we...
Although much is known about the linguistic function of vowel nasality, either contrastive (as in Fr...
This thesis proposes a merger of voicing and nasality under a single phonological feature. One main ...
We investigate the phonotactic behaviour of nasal consonants in a database of over 200 languages. Ou...
While sociophonetic research has made great progress in understanding the phonetic and social mechan...