Rosen’s Rule
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Mark Irwin
Abstract
Rosen’s Rule states that rendaku is predictable when at least one element in a compound is three moras or longer. The rule is of importance for two reasons. Firstly, it adds further to the evidence affirming the role of the foot in Japanese. Secondly, the application of Rosen’s Rule allows us to flag a given morpheme for rendaku immunity (never undergoing rendaku) or its opposite, rendaku submission (always undergoing rendaku). However, recent work on Rosen’s Rule has shown that its psychological reality is unproven and, due to inconsistent definitions in Rosen’s work, scholarly interpretation of the Rule has not yet reached a consensus. Harnessing the Rendaku Database, the Rule is subjected to a thoroughgoing analysis, the outcome of which is that Rosen’s Rule is judged to be highly robust, with an accuracy level in the area of 90%.
Abstract
Rosen’s Rule states that rendaku is predictable when at least one element in a compound is three moras or longer. The rule is of importance for two reasons. Firstly, it adds further to the evidence affirming the role of the foot in Japanese. Secondly, the application of Rosen’s Rule allows us to flag a given morpheme for rendaku immunity (never undergoing rendaku) or its opposite, rendaku submission (always undergoing rendaku). However, recent work on Rosen’s Rule has shown that its psychological reality is unproven and, due to inconsistent definitions in Rosen’s work, scholarly interpretation of the Rule has not yet reached a consensus. Harnessing the Rendaku Database, the Rule is subjected to a thoroughgoing analysis, the outcome of which is that Rosen’s Rule is judged to be highly robust, with an accuracy level in the area of 90%.
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents vii
- List of contributors ix
- Introduction 1
- Generative treatments of rendaku and related issues 13
- Psycholinguistic studies of rendaku 35
- Rendaku and Identity Avoidance 47
- Rendaku awareness of Japanese learners in Taiwan 57
- The Rendaku Database 79
- Rosen’s Rule 107
- Rendaku and individual segments 119
- Rendaku in Okinawan 139
- Rendaku in Tōhoku Japanese 173
- Rendaku in cross-linguistic perspective 195
- A rendaku bibliography 235
- References 251
- Index 273
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents vii
- List of contributors ix
- Introduction 1
- Generative treatments of rendaku and related issues 13
- Psycholinguistic studies of rendaku 35
- Rendaku and Identity Avoidance 47
- Rendaku awareness of Japanese learners in Taiwan 57
- The Rendaku Database 79
- Rosen’s Rule 107
- Rendaku and individual segments 119
- Rendaku in Okinawan 139
- Rendaku in Tōhoku Japanese 173
- Rendaku in cross-linguistic perspective 195
- A rendaku bibliography 235
- References 251
- Index 273