Abstract
This article considers the theoretical challenge posed by fixed segmentism, the introduction of a particular segment or segments into a reduplicated string. The languages of the Indian subcontinent contain many examples of this type and a wide range of different patterns is presented. Previous accounts of fixed segmentism are surveyed and applied to these data, with particular attention to the optimality theory approach of Alderete et al. (1999). This is contrasted with a new proposal, termed “dual description”, which is set within the framework of declarative phonology. This uses the mechanism of default inheritance to implement the repetition of phonological material from the base. The introduction of fixed segments is handled by default unification, a procedure that conjoins the inherited material with information specific to the reduplicant, giving priority to the latter. This approach is applied to the Indian data and shown to handle the full range of patterns of fixed segmentism successfully. Its potential as a general theory of reduplication is also demonstrated by applying dual description to various other kinds of reduplicative phenomena.
© Walter de Gruyter
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- Fixed segmentism and dual description
- Symbolic flexibility and argument structure variation
- NP-anaphora and focused possessors in parallel architecture
- Instrument inversion in Toqabaqita
- At the interface: selection of the Welsh definite article
- Why children aren't universally successful with quantification
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Articles in the same Issue
- Fixed segmentism and dual description
- Symbolic flexibility and argument structure variation
- NP-anaphora and focused possessors in parallel architecture
- Instrument inversion in Toqabaqita
- At the interface: selection of the Welsh definite article
- Why children aren't universally successful with quantification
- “Creating language anew”: some remarks on an idea of Bernard Comrie's