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E-grāmata: Theory of Lexical Phonology

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I: Introduction.- 1.1. The Issues.- 1.2. The Historical Perspective.-
1.3. The Spiral of Progress.- Notes.- II: An Outline of the Theory: English
Phonology.- 2.1. Lexical and Postlexical Rule Applications.- 2.1.1. Two
Criteria.- 2.1.2. Lexical Representations.- 2.1.3. Modularity in Lexical
Phonology.- 2.1.4. The Intuitions: Word Phonology and Phrase Phonology.- 2.2.
Lexical Morphology.- 2.3. The Use of Morphological Information in Phonology.-
2.3.1. Junctures and Rule Blocking.- 2.3.2. Junctures as Triggers: Bracket
Erasure.- 2.3.3. Consequences of Bracket Erasure.- 2.4. How Many Strata in
English?.- 2.4.1. Stratum 2 vs. Stratum 3: Stem Final Tensing.- 2.4.2.
Syllable Structure in English.- 2.4.3. Strata 2,3 and 4: Syllabic
Consonants.- 2.4.4. More on Strata 2, 3 and 4: [ 1] Velarization.- 2.4.5.
Linking [ r] in Nonrhotic Accents.- 2.4.6. Summary.- 2.5. Rules, Domains, and
Stratum Ordering.- 2.5.1. Why Domains?.- 2.5.2. Multiple Stratum Domain in
Phonology.- 2.5.3. Multiple Stratum Domain in Morphology.- 2.5.4. Marked and
Unmarked Options.- 2.5.5. The Metaphor of Stratal Organization.- 2.5.6.
Cycles and Strata.- 2.5.7. Cyclic and Noncyclic Strata.- 2.5.8. The Loop.-
2.6. The Mental Representation of Lexical Entries.- 2.6.1. Actual and
Potential Words.- 2.6.2. Productivity: Phonological Rules and Performance.-
2.6.3. The Productivity Continuum.- Notes.- III: Malayalam Phonology:
Segmentals.- 3.1. The Lexical Alphabet.- 3.1.1. Lexical Contrasts.- 3.1.2.
Voicing of Stops.- 3.1.3. Lenition of Stops.- 3.1.4. Schwa Onglide after
Voiced Stops.- 3.2. The Underlying Alphabet.- 3.2.1. Nasals: Place and
Nasality Assimilations.- 3.2.2. Other Rules for Nasals.- 3.2.3. Underlying
Stops.- 3.3. Syllable Structure in Malayalam.- 3.3.1. The Syllable Template.-
3.3.2. Glide Formation.- 3.3.3. Schwa Insertion.- 3.4. Lexical Strata in
Malayalam.- 3.4.1. Productivity, Sanskrit and Dravidian.- 3.4.2. Two Types of
Compounding.- 3.4.3. Schwa Insertion in Compounds.- 3.4.4. Degemination of
Sonorants.- 3.4.5. Stem-Initial Gemination.- 3.4.6. Stem-Final Gemination.-
3.4.7. Postsonorant Gemination.- 3.4.8. Nasal Deletion.- 3.4.9. Vowel
Lengthening.- 3.4.10. Vowel Sandhi.- 3.5. Summary.- Notes.- IV: Malayalam
Phonology: Suprasegmentals.- 4.1. The Loop in Malayalam Morphology.- 4.2.
Stress and Word Melody.- 4.2.1. Stress.- 4.2.2. Word Melody.- 4.3. The Domain
of Stress and Word Melody.- 4.4. Schwa Insertion and Word Melody.- 4.5. An
Ordering Paradox.- 4.6. The Effect of the Loop on Stress and Word Melody.-
Notes.- V: Accessing Morphological Information.- 5.1. Types of
Nonphonological Information in Phonology.- 5.2. Boundaries.- 5.2.1.
Boundaries, Concatenation, and Domains.- 5.2.2. Boundary Assignment in SPE.-
5.2.3. Concatenation/Stratum vs. Boundary/Bracket Theories.- 5.3. Domains as
Node Labels on Trees.- 5.3.1. Selkirk's Theory.- 5.3.2. Lexicalist Phonology:
Concatenation, Stratum and Brackets.- 5.4. Hierarchical Structure in
Morphology Notes.- VI: The Postlexical Module.- 6.1. Syntactic and
Postsyntactic Modules.- 6.1.1. Accessing Syntactic Information in Phonology.-
6.1.2. Phonological Rules Sensitive to Syntax.- 6.1.3. Phonological Phrases.-
6.1.4. Preview.- 6.2. Speech as Implementation of Phonetic Representation.-
6.3. The Nature of Phonetic Representations.- 6.3.1. Phonetic Features on a
Scale.- 6.3.2. How Abstract are Phonetic Representations?.- 6.3.3. The Status
of Segments in Phonetic Representations.- 6.4. Language-Specific
Implementational Phenomena.- 6.5. Types of Subsegmental Phenomena.- 6.5.1.
Timing of Articulatory Gestures.- 6.5.2. Coordination of Articulatory
Gestures.- 6.5.3. Degree of Articulatory Gestures.- 6.5.4. Enhancement as
Phonetic Implementation.- 6.6. Underlying and Lexical Alphabets.- 6.7.
Phonological Structure and Phonetic Implementation.- 6.8. Phonetic
Implementation and Classical Phonemics.- 6.8.1. Conditions Relating the
Phonemic and Phonetic Levels.- 6.8.2. The Nature of the Mapping.- Notes.-
VII: Lexical Phonology and Psychological Reality.- 7.1. The Nature of
Evidence in Phonology.- 7.1.1. Corpus vs. Speaker Behaviour.- 7.1.2. Internal
and External Evidence.- 7.2. Speaker Judgments.- 7.2.1. Judgments on the
Number of Segments.- 7.2.2. Judgments on Segment Distinctions.- 7.2.3. The
Perceptual Grid.- 7.2.4. What the Speakers Think They Are Saying or Hearing.-
7.3. Phonemic Orthography.- 7.4. Conventions of Sound Patterning in
Versification.- 7.4.1. Rhyme in English.- 7.4.2. Rhyme in Malayalam.- 7.4.3.
Metre in Malayalam.- Notes.- Conclusion.- References.- Index of Names.- Index
of Subjects.