The status of extrasyllabic consonants in English and German
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.21248/zaspil.21.2001.91Abstract
Since the advent of nonlinear phonology many linguists have either assumed or argued explicitly that many languages have words in which one or more segment does not belong structurally to the syllable. Three commonly employed adjectives used to describe such consonants are 'extrasyllabic', 'extrametrical' or 'stray'. Other authors refer to such segments as belonging to the 'appendix'. [...] Various non-linear representations have been proposed to express the 'extrasyllabicity' of segments [...]. The ones I am concerned with in the present article analyze [...] consonants [...] structurally as being outside of the syllable [...]. For transparency I ignore here both subsyllabic constituency as well as higher level prosodic constituents to which the stray consonants are sometimes assumed to attach. For reasons to be made clear below I refer to syllables [...] in which the stray consonant is situated outside of the syllable, as abstract syllables.
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2001
Zitationsvorschlag
Hall, Tracy Alan. 2001. „The Status of Extrasyllabic Consonants in English and German“. ZAS Papers in Linguistics 21 (Januar):89-117. https://doi.org/10.21248/zaspil.21.2001.91.
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