A great deal of recent research has addressed the representation of laryngeal features. Debates in the literature focus on several major aspects of phonological theory, including monovalent versus bivalent features, gradient versus categorical processes, and phonetic detail in phonological representation. In discussions of these issues, evidence from a range of sources has been used, including phonetics, phonology, typology, and diachrony. Surprisingly, very little evidence from acquisition has been brought to bear on the issue of laryngeal representation
Contains fulltext : 44614.pdf (author's version ) (Closed access
While Natural Phonology has long contended that phonemes are specified for their phonetic properties...
Phonological representations are typically thought of as abstract: for example, phonemes are argued ...
Contains fulltext : 61692.pdf (author's version ) (Open Access)[Hamburg] Workshop...
We consider two theories of laryngeal representation, one using a single feature [voice] generalizin...
This study attempts to provide the phonological and phonetic representations of laryngeal features i...
Two traditions have arisen from an ongoing debate concerning cross-linguistic laryngeal representati...
In this thesis the representation of voicing contrasts is explored. The central claim of the thesis ...
In this paper, we propose a “typological adaptation ” for the model of loanword phonology. Within th...
A system of three laryngeal features, called (voice), (aspiration), and (glottalization), is argued ...
In this article we present a new model of phonological representa-tions, concentrating on laryngeal ...
Contains fulltext : 86027.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access
The nature of the categories that are basic in linguistic representation is an important issue in sp...
This work investigates feature co-occurrence trends, with special focus on the phonology of the lary...
the assumptions of ‘laryngeal realism’, an approach to feature representation which distinguishes st...
Contains fulltext : 44614.pdf (author's version ) (Closed access
While Natural Phonology has long contended that phonemes are specified for their phonetic properties...
Phonological representations are typically thought of as abstract: for example, phonemes are argued ...
Contains fulltext : 61692.pdf (author's version ) (Open Access)[Hamburg] Workshop...
We consider two theories of laryngeal representation, one using a single feature [voice] generalizin...
This study attempts to provide the phonological and phonetic representations of laryngeal features i...
Two traditions have arisen from an ongoing debate concerning cross-linguistic laryngeal representati...
In this thesis the representation of voicing contrasts is explored. The central claim of the thesis ...
In this paper, we propose a “typological adaptation ” for the model of loanword phonology. Within th...
A system of three laryngeal features, called (voice), (aspiration), and (glottalization), is argued ...
In this article we present a new model of phonological representa-tions, concentrating on laryngeal ...
Contains fulltext : 86027.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access
The nature of the categories that are basic in linguistic representation is an important issue in sp...
This work investigates feature co-occurrence trends, with special focus on the phonology of the lary...
the assumptions of ‘laryngeal realism’, an approach to feature representation which distinguishes st...
Contains fulltext : 44614.pdf (author's version ) (Closed access
While Natural Phonology has long contended that phonemes are specified for their phonetic properties...
Phonological representations are typically thought of as abstract: for example, phonemes are argued ...