Title: The Scope of Generalization in Phonology
1The Scope of Generalization in Phonology
- Gregory R. Guy
- New York University
- VGFP Workshop, Stanford, July 07
2Generalization in Phonology
- Identify (and explain?) phonological patterns
that are prevalent across some domain
3Maximum generality phonological universals
- For all human speakers (of all languages),
- in all linguistic contexts,
- in all lexical items,
- x is always true.
4Non-universal generalizations
- Involve limits on either
- the SCOPE of one of domains (the
all quantifiers) - OR
- the PREVALENCE of the pattern (the
always quantifier) - or both
5Scope Social domain, contextual
domain, lexical domainPrevalence frequency or
probability
- For all human speakers (of all languages),
- in all linguistic contexts,
- in all lexical items,
- x is always true.
6Quantifying social scope(e.g. language-specific
generalizations)
- For speakers in some social domain i
-
- e.g., a speech community, dialect, language,
- OR
- a social group defined by age, class, gender,
ethnicity, etc.
7Quantifying contextual scope e.g.,
context-sensitive generalizations, gradience
- .. in some linguistic context j
8Quantifying lexical scope e.g., lexical
frequency, lexical exceptions
- .. in some lexical domain k ..
9Quantifying prevalence e.g., variable,
stochastic, or probabilistic generalizations
- .. x is true with a probability p.
10Quantified Generality
- For speakers in some social domain i,
- in some linguistic context j,
- in some lexical domain k,
- x is true with a probability p
- .. where, typically, p is a function of i, j, k
11Social scope
- For speakers in some social domain i
-
12Social proximity implies linguistic similarity
- Speech community members share grammatical
properties - Contrasting Constraints Hypothesis Different
speech communities may have contrasting values
for the probabilistic constraints on variable
processes. - Shared Constraints Hypothesis The members of a
speech community share common values for the
probabilistic constraints on variable processes.
13 14Communities differ Following context effect on
coronal stop deletion in two cities
-
- Speech speakers with Community
- Community constraint ranking preference
- CgtV Cgt0 Vgt0
- Philadelphia 89 100 95 CgtVgt0
- (N19)
- New York 100 50 0 C0gtV
- (N4)
- Cconsonant, Vvowel, 0pause
15Communities differ Final -s deletion in four
Brazilian cities
16 17Within communities speakers share constraint
rankings and values
- In a study of coronal stop deletion in 16
Philadelphian speakers, looking at 8 constraints
(3 morphological and 5 phonological), individual
results are distributed as follows
18Shared constraint rankings Coronal stop deletion
in 16 Philadelphians
- number of speakers ()
- deviations from --number of tokens per
speaker-- random - community order gt170 100-170 lt100
distribution - 0 5 (100) (0.1)
- 1 3 (60) 1 (17) (2.8)
- 2 2 (40) 4 (67) (17.4)
- 3 (39.8)
- 4 (25.0)
- 5 1 (17) (8.5)
- 6 (5.7)
- all 8 (0.1)
19Shared values with sufficient data, speakers
converge
20 21Contextual scope
- in some linguistic context j
22Contextual scope gradient effects on variable
processes
- OCP (Obligatory contour principle) is a general
phonological constraint against sequences of
adjacent identical elements. - In many languages it categorically prohibits
certains sequences. - e.g., English affix allomorphy
- cats vs. glasses, backed vs. batted
23OCP effects are gradient in variable processes
- Place effect on deletion of final coronal cor,
-ant consonants in three languages - Percent deleted Factor Weight
- Place Port Span Eng Port
Span Eng - Coronal
- cor, ant 21 31 44 .66 .57 .65
- Labial
- -cor, ant 14 32 .53 .56
- Velar
- -cor, -ant 6 16 34 .31 .38
.35
24English coronal stop deletion by preceding
context (Guy Boberg 1995)
- Preceding Context N Factor
weight - Identity with deletion target
- /t,d/ cor, -son, -cont (categorical
absence, i.e., 1.00) - Two shared features
- /s,z,?,z/ cor, -son 276 49 .69
- /p,b,k,g/ -son, -cont 136 37 .69
- /n/ cor, -cont 337 46 .73
- One shared feature
- /f,v/ -son 45 29 .55
- /l/ cor 182 32 .45
- /m,?/ -cont 9 11 .33
- No shared features
- /r/ 86 7 .13
- vowels (nearly categorical retention,
i.e., 0.00)
25Conclusion OCP is gradient
- The disharmony of an OCP violation increases in
proportion to the phonological similarity between
adjacent elements.
26Lexical scope
- .. in some lexical domain k ..
27Lexical issues for phonology
- Lexical exceptions
- Lexical frequency
- Historical borrowings with distinct phonology
(e.g., Latinate vocabulary of English,
Chinese-origin vocabulary of Japanese) - Recent borrowings
- Proper names
28Defining lexical scope generalizations over part
of the lexicon
- Two strategies for handling lexically-restricted
properties - Tweak the phonology
- Tweak the underlying representations
29Tweaking the phonology
- Exception features co-index phonological rules
with lexical items they apply to (cf. Chomsky
Halle) - Co-phonologies, lexical classes different
constraints or constraint rankings for different
subsets of the lexicon (cf. Inkelas, Ito
Mester)
30Tweaking underlying representations
- The (lexically partial) generalization is already
encoded in the UR, not generated by the phonology - Items that fail to show some generalization get
URs that block that outcome - Variable lexical class membership (cf. Coetzee,
this afternoon)
31Example English plurals with f-v alternations
- Regular pattern final C is invariant in plural
- cat-cats, chief-chiefs, puff-puffs, etc.
- Exceptional pattern final fgtv in plural
- leaf-leaves, wife-wives, loaf-loaves, etc.
32 - Tweak the phonology
- Special rule for fgtv in plurals
- Exception feature specifies all the words that
undergo this rule - Tweak the lexicon
- URs of leaves, wives, loaves have /v/
- URs of leaf, wife, loaf, etc. are under-specified
for voice, with appropriate conventions to fill
in specification.
33Lexical exceptions in variation
- Many variable processes are known to exhibit
unusual frequencies of occurrence in particular
lexical items. - e.g., coronal stop deletion in English is
exceptionally frequent in and - (Exceptional because deletion occurs
significantly more often in and than in
phonologically comparable words like sand, band,
hand, etc.)
34The two strategies applied to lexical exceptions
to variable processes
- Phonological tweak exceptional lexical items
have a feature that raises or lowers the
probability of a given phonological process
occurring in that word. - e.g., and is associated with an exception
feature that raises the probability of coronal
stop deletion.
35 - Lexical tweak exceptional lexical items have
alternate entries that pre-encode the output of
the process. - e.g., and has an alternate entry an. When
this form is selected, it always surfaces without
a final /d/, thereby boosting the apparent rate
of coronal stop deletion. - (cf. rock n roll, an orthographic
representation of this underlying form?)
36Testing the strategiesVariation as a window
into phonological organization
- The two strategies for handling lexical
exceptions may not be decidable on
obligatory/categorical data because of absence of
constraint interaction - But variation data, showing constraint
interaction, allows a test of the models.
37The two strategies make different quantitative
predictions
- Exception feature approach simply boosts the
overall probability of deletion in and, leaving
other constraint effects unchanged. - Hence, effect of following C vs. V should be the
same in exceptional and unexceptional words - Cheese n crackers is always deleted more than
ham n eggs
38 - The lexical entry approach achieves elevated
surface rates of -d absence in and by selection
of UR an, which does not undergo coronal stop
deletion, and is therefore insensitive to
constraints on that process. - Hence, lexical exceptions show reduced effect
of following C vs V - Cheese n crackers is as likely as ham n eggs
39 - The specific quantitative effect
- A surface corpus of exceptional words is a
mixture of two sets of foms - -some are derived from underlying full forms
(e.g. and) and show the effects of constraints
on the process, - -others are derived from underlying reduced
forms (an) and are not affected by constraints
on the process
40 - The mixture of the two sets has the quantitative
effect of attenuating the effect of constraints
on the process. - -in a multivariate analysis, this attenuation
should be manifested as a smaller range of values
for a factor group measuring a constraint on the
process (e.g., the following segment effect on
coronal stop deletion).
41Predictions
- Exception feature approach constraint effects
should be equivalent in exceptional and
nonexceptional corpora - Multiple underlying entries constraint effects
should appear to be weaker in exceptional than
nonexceptional corpora.
42Data English coronal stop deletion and
exceptional and
- Non-exceptional Exception
(and) - words
- N del N del
- __C 572 39.3 441 95.7
- __V 495 15.8 312 82.1
- Range 23.5 gt 13.6
- (Source Neu 1980)
43Lexical exceptions in Brazilian Portuguese -s
deletion
- Features of following C Non-exceptions
Lexical exceptions - (-mos forms)
- Voice/Manner sonorant .69 .49
- voiced obstruent .44 .58
- voiceless obstruent .36 .44
- Range .33 gt .14
- Place labial .32 .58
- coronal .61 .53
- velar .44 .39
- Range .29 gt .19
- N 5880 1225
- Log likelihood -704.8 -791.5
44-s deletion in Salvadoran Spanish (Hoffman 2004)
- Non-exceptional words Lexical
exceptions - Following context (entonces, digamos,
pues) - sonorant .60 .63
- voiced obstruent .75 .55
- voiceless obstruent .33 .38
- vowel .36 .38
- pause .44 .56
- Range .42 gt .25
- Syllable Stress
- stressed .38 .42
- unstressed .62 .58
- Range .24 gt .16
45Summary In 5 constraints (factor groups) on 3
processes in 3 languages
- Magnitude of constraint effect is always weaker
for exceptional lexical items - This is consistent with predictions of the
lexical entry (lexicon tweaking) strategy
contradicts exception feature (phonology
tweaking) strategy.
46Conclusion Speakers tweak the lexicon
- Lexical exceptions to variable processes are
accomplished by alterations to the underlying
representation and the existence of multiple
representations - (cf. Kiparskys treatment of -t,d deletion in
stratal OT).
47Another prediction
- Exception feature approach permits both positive
and negative exceptions (lexical items that
undergo a process at a higher or lower
probability than other words) - Underlying form approach allows only positive
exceptions, with higher probabilities (cant
block -t,d deletion)
48Impressionistic confirmation
- All lexical exception cases in variation studies
I am familiar with involve elevated rates of
occurrence of a variable process, never reduced
rates. - This confirms the prediction of the lexical entry
approach.
49The Paninian nature of partial generalizations
- Variation involves the quantification of
prevalence - Non-universal generalization involves
quantification of scope, in social, contextual,
and lexical domains.