Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
Exceptions to stress and harmony in Turkish: co-phonologies or prespecification?
-
and
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Contents V
- Preface IX
-
Introductory overview
- What are exceptions? And what can be done about them? 3
- Coming to grips with exceptions 31
-
Classical loci for exceptions: morphology and the lexicon
- Exceptions to stress and harmony in Turkish: co-phonologies or prespecification? 59
- Lexical exceptions as prespecification: some critical remarks 95
- Feature spreading, lexical specification and truncation 103
- Higher order exceptionality in inflectional morphology 107
- An I-language view of morphological ‘exceptionality’: Comments on Corbett’s paper 127
- Exceptions and what they tell us: reflections on Anderson’s comments 135
- How do exceptions arise? On different paths to morphological irregularity 139
- On the role of subregularities in the rise of exceptions 163
- Statement on the commentary by Wolfgang U. Dressler 169
-
Taking into account interactions of grammatical sub-systems
- Lexical variation in relativizer frequency 175
- Corpus evidence and the role of probability estimates in processing decisions 197
- Response to Kempson’s comments 205
- Structured exceptions and case selection in Insular Scandinavian 213
- Remarks on two kinds of exceptions: arbitrary vs. structured exceptions 243
- Response to Susann Fischer 251
-
Loosening the strictness of grammar
- Three approaches to exceptionality in syntactic typology 255
- Remarks on three approaches to exceptionality in syntactic typology 283
- A reply to the commentary by Artemis Alexiadou 289
- Three types of exceptions – and all of them rule-based 291
- Anomalies and exceptions 325
- Distinguishing lexical and syntactic exceptions 335
- Disagreement, variation, markedness, and other apparent exceptions 339
- What is an exception to what? – Some comments on Ralf Vogel’s contribution 361
- Response to van Riemsdijk 369
- Describing exceptions in a formal grammar framework 377
- Explanation and constraint relaxation 401
-
Unexpected loci for exceptions: languages and language families
- Quantitative explorations of the worldwide distribution of rare characteristics, or: the exceptionality of northwestern European languages 411
- Remarks on rarity 433
- Some more details about the definition of rarity 437
- Subject index 443
- Language index 449
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Contents V
- Preface IX
-
Introductory overview
- What are exceptions? And what can be done about them? 3
- Coming to grips with exceptions 31
-
Classical loci for exceptions: morphology and the lexicon
- Exceptions to stress and harmony in Turkish: co-phonologies or prespecification? 59
- Lexical exceptions as prespecification: some critical remarks 95
- Feature spreading, lexical specification and truncation 103
- Higher order exceptionality in inflectional morphology 107
- An I-language view of morphological ‘exceptionality’: Comments on Corbett’s paper 127
- Exceptions and what they tell us: reflections on Anderson’s comments 135
- How do exceptions arise? On different paths to morphological irregularity 139
- On the role of subregularities in the rise of exceptions 163
- Statement on the commentary by Wolfgang U. Dressler 169
-
Taking into account interactions of grammatical sub-systems
- Lexical variation in relativizer frequency 175
- Corpus evidence and the role of probability estimates in processing decisions 197
- Response to Kempson’s comments 205
- Structured exceptions and case selection in Insular Scandinavian 213
- Remarks on two kinds of exceptions: arbitrary vs. structured exceptions 243
- Response to Susann Fischer 251
-
Loosening the strictness of grammar
- Three approaches to exceptionality in syntactic typology 255
- Remarks on three approaches to exceptionality in syntactic typology 283
- A reply to the commentary by Artemis Alexiadou 289
- Three types of exceptions – and all of them rule-based 291
- Anomalies and exceptions 325
- Distinguishing lexical and syntactic exceptions 335
- Disagreement, variation, markedness, and other apparent exceptions 339
- What is an exception to what? – Some comments on Ralf Vogel’s contribution 361
- Response to van Riemsdijk 369
- Describing exceptions in a formal grammar framework 377
- Explanation and constraint relaxation 401
-
Unexpected loci for exceptions: languages and language families
- Quantitative explorations of the worldwide distribution of rare characteristics, or: the exceptionality of northwestern European languages 411
- Remarks on rarity 433
- Some more details about the definition of rarity 437
- Subject index 443
- Language index 449