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Sound change in romance and the non-explanatory nature of preference laws

    1. [1] Concordia University

      Concordia University

      Canadá

  • Localización: Linguisticae investigationes: Revue internationale de linguistique française et de linguistique générale, ISSN 0378-4169, Tome 14, Fascicule 1, 1990, págs. 65-80
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Texto completo no disponible (Saber más ...)
  • Resumen
    • In recent years, it has been proposed, notably by Vennemann and Murray, that the direction of sound change can be predicted in terms of a set of syllable-structure preference laws which are based on the notion of consonantal strength. This paper attempts to show how problematic such an approach proves to be when the data from Romance historical phonology proposed in support of these laws are examined critically. Numerous counterexamples and internal contradictions suggest that syllable structure has little or no influence on the effectuation of any type of sound change, and that it is purely fortuitous if a more "preferred" structure happens to emerge from a phonetically-motivated operation.


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