서울대학교에서 아래와 같이 콜로퀴움이 진행됩니다.
이틀후 금요일 10시이니, 회원 여러분들의 많은 참여를 부탁드립니다.
한국음운론학회 드림
- 일시: 2021년 5월 28일(금) 오전 10시
- 콜로퀴움 참여 링크: https://snu-ac-kr.zoom.
- 강사: Donca Steriade (MIT)
- 제목: Harmony and myopia in vocalic plateaux
- 개요: I analyze a phenomenon that looks like vowel harmony, but is triggered by a preference to preserve an identity relation (a plateau) between vowels in adjacent syllables. A schematic illustration is this: a rule raises word-final /a/ to [i], e.g. /uba/→[ubi]. When applied to underlying strings of contiguous /a/ syllables, like /abaka/, this rule causes the /a/’s to raise across-the-board to [i]: /abaka/→[ibiki]. Sequences of different heights, like /abi/, remain unchanged. This shows that non-final /a/’s change not because they assimilate to /i/ but to preserve the identity relations between members of the input [a]-plateau.
Across-the-board shifts of this sort are found in surprisingly many systems: Romanian, Javanese, Yakan, Rotuman, Welsh, possibly Telugu, and elsewhere. Comparable ATB tonal shifts are frequent, requiring constraints that protect tonal plateaus. The analysis of all these phenomena invokes constraints that preserve input identity relations. It can be shown that analyses which attribute theATB behaviors to multiply linked vocalic or tonal autosegments don’t do justice to such patterns.
Having outlined the general analysis of this phenomenon, I take a closer look at the ATB-shift of Romanian. This reveals a pattern that contradicts the belief that harmony is myopic (Wilson 2006, McCarthy 2011), i.e. the idea that harmony applies in local steps, without anticipating non-local consequences of any one iteration. The Romanian process is initiated by local raising [a] to [ə] (e.g. CaCi→CəCi). Raising extends to full strings of [a]’s: e.g. [CaCaCaC-i]→[CəCəCəC-i]. If, however, a position in the chain of [a]’s disallows [ə], only the local raising applies: [aCaCaC-i]→[aCaCəC-i], not *[əCəCəC-i], as initial [ə] is banned, and not *[aCəCəC-i] either. A raised [ə]</a/ does not spread to a preceding [a] unless the entire string of [a]’s can raise to [ə].
The existence of this non-myopic process is a challenge to all analyses of harmony based on the assumptions of Harmonic Serialism (McCarthy 2011). A somewhat similar non-myopic harmony is documented by Stanton 2019, in Gurindji.
I will show that a minor change in our conception of harmony allows us to analyze both apparently myopic processes and clearly far-sighted ATB shifts like that of Romanian.
※ 서울대학교 언어학과 콜로퀴움에 대한 안내는 아래 링크에서 자세히 확인하실 수 있습니다.
▸ SNU Linguistics 10X10 Project 홈페이지: https://snuling.com