Prosodic Phonology: With a New ForewordProsodic Phonology by Marina Nespor and Irene Vogel is finally available again. "Nespor & Vogel 1986" is a citation classic, and even after twenty years, it is still recognized as the standard resource on Prosodic Phonology. This groundbreaking work introduces all of the prosodic domains (syllable, foot, word, clitic group, phonological phrase, intonational phrase and utterance) and comments on the evidence in their favor from numerous languages. It also contains a chapter on the phonology of poetic meter, and a chapter on the experimental testing of the role of the prosodic constituents in the perception of ambiguous sentences. The book is an important reference not only for all phonologists, but for all linguists interested in the problem of interfaces. It is a basic resource also for psycholinguists and for cognitive scientists working on perception of language and language acquisition. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 92
... components Morphology Syntax Semantics 1.3 . Data Type of speech Phenomena xi xxxi 1 1 3 5 6 7 14 17 17 19 21 2322 24 Chapter 2. Motivation for prosodic constituents 2.0 . Introduction .... 2.1.Phonological processes in nonphonological ...
... constituents and phonological rules 48 Traces of clitics 49 PRO .. 50 Traces of wh 53 ..... 2.3.3 . Noncorrespondence between syntactic constituents and domains of intonation contours 2.4 . On motivating a phonological constituent 555 ...
... Prosodic constituents and disambiguation 249 9.0 . Introduction 249 9.1 . Ambiguity 250 9.1.1 . Types of ambiguity 251 9.1.2 . Disambiguation 253 9.1.3 . Syntactic structure vs. prosodic structure 9.2 . Tow proposals for disambiguation ...
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Contents
Motivation for prosodic constituents | 27 |
Beyond the sentence | 46 |
The syllable and the foot | 61 |
The phonological word | 109 |
The clitic group | 145 |
The phonological phrase | 165 |
The intonational phrase | 187 |
The phonological utterance | 221 |
Prosodic constituents and disambiguation | 249 |
Prosodic domains and the meter of the Commedia | 273 |
Conclusions | 299 |
305 | |
319 | |
325 | |