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The wandering *S: The problem of the...
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Southern, Mark R. V.
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The wandering *S: The problem of the s-mobile in Germanic and Indo-European.
Record Type:
Language materials, printed : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
The wandering *S: The problem of the s-mobile in Germanic and Indo-European./
Author:
Southern, Mark R. V.
Description:
672 p.
Notes:
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 58-03, Section: A, page: 0849.
Contained By:
Dissertation Abstracts International58-03A.
Subject:
Language, Ancient. -
Online resource:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=9724758
ISBN:
9780591334937
The wandering *S: The problem of the s-mobile in Germanic and Indo-European.
Southern, Mark R. V.
The wandering *S: The problem of the s-mobile in Germanic and Indo-European.
- 672 p.
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 58-03, Section: A, page: 0849.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Princeton University, 1997.
The movable s defies distributional predictability, within Indo-European and later daughter-languages. Word-initial s-/zero alternations occur across every IE dialect-group, apparently without conditioning or living morphological function, nonetheless in certain languages--chiefly Germanic and Balto-Slavic--exhibiting unexpected, regenerative durability. Enigmas surrounding its morphophonemic origins have eluded satisfactory resolution. Phonologically-conditioned sentential sandhi, involving *s-degemination across word-boundaries by sound-rule, alongside metanalysis (n-orange), does not adequately account for the data's nature and spread, even with the help of analogical extension and hypercorrection (accretion/loss).
ISBN: 9780591334937Subjects--Topical Terms:
1018100
Language, Ancient.
The wandering *S: The problem of the s-mobile in Germanic and Indo-European.
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The wandering *S: The problem of the s-mobile in Germanic and Indo-European.
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672 p.
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Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 58-03, Section: A, page: 0849.
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Thesis (Ph.D.)--Princeton University, 1997.
520
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The movable s defies distributional predictability, within Indo-European and later daughter-languages. Word-initial s-/zero alternations occur across every IE dialect-group, apparently without conditioning or living morphological function, nonetheless in certain languages--chiefly Germanic and Balto-Slavic--exhibiting unexpected, regenerative durability. Enigmas surrounding its morphophonemic origins have eluded satisfactory resolution. Phonologically-conditioned sentential sandhi, involving *s-degemination across word-boundaries by sound-rule, alongside metanalysis (n-orange), does not adequately account for the data's nature and spread, even with the help of analogical extension and hypercorrection (accretion/loss).
520
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Chapters 1-2 deal with phonological-distribution issues; Chapter 3 explores origin, character and function. IE s-movable's original and subsequent nature is investigated for possible morphological explanations, particularly as applied to root-structure constraints, to motivate and classify the doublets' structurally anomalous behavior. Initial $\pm
$s
shows symmetry with root-final s-clusters; a system-gap is filled. S-loss is probably the dominant dynamic, with complementary s-addition effects.
520
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S-loss primacy is borne out by the secondary, successive continuation of s-movable into Germanic. The chronological layering of Germanic evidence relative to the Sound Shifts supplies an unusual vantage-point for observing the process over time. Chapter 4 views s-mobile's later development against the extraordinary preponderance of material specifically from the Germanic dialects, morphologically analyzed case-by-case. To questions of word-boundaries' non-salience, OHG evidence (Celtic, Indic) for Auslaut-conditioned word-initial voicing alternants (Notkers Anlautgesetz) suggests that the IE sentence-string was a linguistically significant unit surprisingly late. Stabreim, binomial pairs, phonetic and prosodic attributes, and expressive (affectively-flavored) features contribute to the composite Germanic picture. S-movable's survival and successive renewal are considered in the light of evidence for Germanic's dialectal archaism within IE.
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Chapters 5-6 discuss the detailed Germanic, Baltic, and pan-IE evidence against relative chronology and phrasal-domain hierarchies (word-boundaries' porosity), and against the cross-linguistically marked, unstable phonetic character of sibilants, particularly their clusters. Beside the IE's sibilant's phonological isolation are set S-clusters' phonemic extraneousness, late acquisition, and ready simplifiability, in child-language and aphasia.
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School code: 0181.
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http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=9724758
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