This paper focuses on prosodic adjunction at the Prosodic Word level in a polysynthetic language. I argue that recursion at a depth of more than two levels can only be generated by a theory which requires exact correspondence between certain syntactic phrases and Prosodic Words. Such a theory is similar to Phonological Phrase correspondence in Match Theory, suggesting there is an underlying shared property between correspondence at the Prosodic Word and Phonological Phrase levels. In addition, this theory must include a constraint which prohibits recursive prosodic constituents in order to generate the attested typology of clitics across languages. The empirical focus is the prosodic structure of the verbal complex in Blackfoot (Algonquian;...
Syntax and Prosody in Kashaya Phrasal Accent This paper explores the nature of prosodic phrasing in ...
In a range of languages, the mapping from syntactic to prosodic structure produces "mismatches", whe...
Pinker and Jackendoff (2005: 10): “…(As mentioned, HCF use “recursion ” in the loose sense of concat...
This dissertation investigates the correspondences between syntactic, prosodic, and metrical constit...
This paper argues that Match Theory (Selkirk 2011) cannot account for some types of phrasal syntax-p...
In this article, a prosodic domain located between the prosodic word and the phonological phrase is ...
Following the development of Prosodic Hierarchy Theory (Selkirk 1984; Nespor & Vogel 1986), evidence...
This study examines phonetic correlates to three prosodic categories in Blackfoot: the syllable (σ),...
It is widely agreed that prosodic constituents should mirror syntactic constituents (unless high-ran...
Abstract Generalizations about relative prosodic boundary strength are recursive. Initial evidence c...
Vogel, IreneThis dissertation examines phonology and its interface with morphology and/or syntax. Cu...
Proceedings of the Nineteenth Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society: Special Session on...
There is a longstanding debate in the literature about if, and where, recursion occurs in prosodic s...
Proceedings of the Tenth Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society (1984), pp. 104-11
This article provides an overview of current and historically important issues in the study of the s...
Syntax and Prosody in Kashaya Phrasal Accent This paper explores the nature of prosodic phrasing in ...
In a range of languages, the mapping from syntactic to prosodic structure produces "mismatches", whe...
Pinker and Jackendoff (2005: 10): “…(As mentioned, HCF use “recursion ” in the loose sense of concat...
This dissertation investigates the correspondences between syntactic, prosodic, and metrical constit...
This paper argues that Match Theory (Selkirk 2011) cannot account for some types of phrasal syntax-p...
In this article, a prosodic domain located between the prosodic word and the phonological phrase is ...
Following the development of Prosodic Hierarchy Theory (Selkirk 1984; Nespor & Vogel 1986), evidence...
This study examines phonetic correlates to three prosodic categories in Blackfoot: the syllable (σ),...
It is widely agreed that prosodic constituents should mirror syntactic constituents (unless high-ran...
Abstract Generalizations about relative prosodic boundary strength are recursive. Initial evidence c...
Vogel, IreneThis dissertation examines phonology and its interface with morphology and/or syntax. Cu...
Proceedings of the Nineteenth Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society: Special Session on...
There is a longstanding debate in the literature about if, and where, recursion occurs in prosodic s...
Proceedings of the Tenth Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society (1984), pp. 104-11
This article provides an overview of current and historically important issues in the study of the s...
Syntax and Prosody in Kashaya Phrasal Accent This paper explores the nature of prosodic phrasing in ...
In a range of languages, the mapping from syntactic to prosodic structure produces "mismatches", whe...
Pinker and Jackendoff (2005: 10): “…(As mentioned, HCF use “recursion ” in the loose sense of concat...