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Exceptions to stress and harmony in Turkish: co-phonologies or prespecification?

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Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter I
  2. Contents V
  3. Preface IX
  4. Introductory overview
  5. What are exceptions? And what can be done about them? 3
  6. Coming to grips with exceptions 31
  7. Classical loci for exceptions: morphology and the lexicon
  8. Exceptions to stress and harmony in Turkish: co-phonologies or prespecification? 59
  9. Lexical exceptions as prespecification: some critical remarks 95
  10. Feature spreading, lexical specification and truncation 103
  11. Higher order exceptionality in inflectional morphology 107
  12. An I-language view of morphological ‘exceptionality’: Comments on Corbett’s paper 127
  13. Exceptions and what they tell us: reflections on Anderson’s comments 135
  14. How do exceptions arise? On different paths to morphological irregularity 139
  15. On the role of subregularities in the rise of exceptions 163
  16. Statement on the commentary by Wolfgang U. Dressler 169
  17. Taking into account interactions of grammatical sub-systems
  18. Lexical variation in relativizer frequency 175
  19. Corpus evidence and the role of probability estimates in processing decisions 197
  20. Response to Kempson’s comments 205
  21. Structured exceptions and case selection in Insular Scandinavian 213
  22. Remarks on two kinds of exceptions: arbitrary vs. structured exceptions 243
  23. Response to Susann Fischer 251
  24. Loosening the strictness of grammar
  25. Three approaches to exceptionality in syntactic typology 255
  26. Remarks on three approaches to exceptionality in syntactic typology 283
  27. A reply to the commentary by Artemis Alexiadou 289
  28. Three types of exceptions – and all of them rule-based 291
  29. Anomalies and exceptions 325
  30. Distinguishing lexical and syntactic exceptions 335
  31. Disagreement, variation, markedness, and other apparent exceptions 339
  32. What is an exception to what? – Some comments on Ralf Vogel’s contribution 361
  33. Response to van Riemsdijk 369
  34. Describing exceptions in a formal grammar framework 377
  35. Explanation and constraint relaxation 401
  36. Unexpected loci for exceptions: languages and language families
  37. Quantitative explorations of the worldwide distribution of rare characteristics, or: the exceptionality of northwestern European languages 411
  38. Remarks on rarity 433
  39. Some more details about the definition of rarity 437
  40. Subject index 443
  41. Language index 449
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