04225nam 2200637 450 991082414160332120230421054950.03-11-096606-910.1515/9783110966060(CKB)3390000000035427(EBL)3045385(SSID)ssj0001121715(PQKBManifestationID)11587598(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001121715(PQKBWorkID)11057238(PQKB)10457251(MiAaPQ)EBC3045385(DE-B1597)45557(OCoLC)979736566(DE-B1597)9783110966060(Au-PeEL)EBL3045385(CaPaEBR)ebr10831429(OCoLC)927460032(EXLCZ)99339000000003542719960531d1995 uy| 0engurnn#---|u||utxtccrFinal devoicing in the phonology of German /Wiebke BrockhausReprint 2012Tùˆbingen :M. Niemeyer,1995.1 online resource (285 p.)Linguistische Arbeiten,0344-6727 ;336Description based upon print version of record.3-11-184783-7 3-484-30336-0 Includes bibliographical references.Front matter --Table of contents --Abbreviations and Notational Conventions --Acknowledgments --Introduction and Overview --1. The 'Facts' of Final Obstruent Devoicing --2. 25 Years of FOD: Earlier Approaches from 1968 to 1993 --3. What is Final Obstruent Devoicing? A Government Phonology Approach --4. Where Does Final Obstruent Devoicing Occur? A Government Phonology Approach --5. Final Obstruent Devoicing and Neutralisation --ReferencesThis book deals with the phonological event of final devoicing in a theoretical framework based on principles and parameters rather than rules. It refers to data coming almost exclusively from German (native and non-native items). The first chapter presents the 'raw facts', providing an outline of the sort of alternations and distributional restrictions on voicing to be accounted for. Previous treatments of final devoicing in German are discussed and evaluated in the second chapter. Chapters 3 and 4 provide an analysis of final devoicing in German couched in the framework of Government Phonology (GP), a phonological theory operating with principles and parameters. Some of the central tenets of GP are introduced at the beginning of chapter 3, and additional concepts of the theory are explained as they become relevant to the discussion of final devoicing. The author argues that final devoicing should be interpreted as a phonological weakening process involving the withdrawal of autosegmental licensing from the laryngeal element L (which represents voicing in obstruents). This occurs in phonologically 'weak' environments, where, due to clearly definable prosodic conditions, only reduced autosegmental licensing potential is available. This analysis, developed with reference to the prestige variety of German (Hochlautung), is then extended to Northern Standard German, and the phonological differences between the two dialects are identified. In the final chapter, the author investigates whether final devoicing results in phonological neutralisation, as is often assumed in the literature. She observes that the GP account developed in chapters 3 and 4 is incompatible with this traditional view. This is desirable, since, among other things, the conflict between earlier phonological analyses and experimental studies of final devoicing can now be resolved.Linguistische Arbeiten (Max Niemeyer Verlag) ;336.German languagePhonologyGerman languageConsonantsGerman languagePhonology.German languageConsonants.431/.5GC 6087rvkBrockhaus Wiebke1682213MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910824141603321Final devoicing in the phonology of German4052185UNINA