LINGUIST List 17.2288
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Thu Aug 10 2006
Diss: Morphology/Phonology/Typology: Schiering: 'Cliticization and ...'
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1. René
Schiering,
Cliticization and the Evolution of Morphology: A cross-linguistic study on phonology in grammaticalization
Message 1: Cliticization and the Evolution of Morphology: A cross-linguistic study on phonology in grammaticalization
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Date: 10-Aug-2006
From: René Schiering <schiering uni-leipzig.de>
Subject: Cliticization and the Evolution of Morphology: A cross-linguistic study on phonology in grammaticalization
Institution: University of Konstanz
Program: Department of Linguistics
Dissertation Status: Completed
Degree Date: 2006
Author: René Schiering
Dissertation Title: Cliticization and the Evolution of Morphology: A cross-linguistic study on phonology in grammaticalization
Dissertation URL: http://www.ub.uni-konstanz.de/kops/volltexte/2006/1872/
Linguistic Field(s):
Morphology
Phonology
Typology
Dissertation Director:
Aditi Lahiri
Frans Plank
Hans-Jürgen Sasse
Dissertation Abstract:
Within grammaticalization theory, progression on the function word > clitic > affix cline is associated with a number of interdependent morpho-syntactic, functional, and phonological processes. The latter can be further subdivided into adaptation and erosion, of which especially erosion has received considerable attention. Drawing data from a nineteen language sample, this study aims at testing the predictions made in the literature with respect to the correlation of cliticization and erosion. In order to systematize the various prosodic and segmental clines encountered in cliticization, this study establishes and defends a rhythm-based typology of language which relies on ten parameters in prosody, phonotactics and morphophonology. The rhythm based typology of language allows for a number of significant predictions with respect to the distribution of the various segmental effects of cliticization. In stress-based languages, stress reduction and tone neutralization go hand in hand with vowel reduction and deletion in unstressed syllables. Since such languages exhibit a high degree of syllable complexity, junctural consonant clusters are likely and we can encounter certain processes applying in this context. Mora- and syllable-based languages, on the other hand, do not show vowel reduction and deletion in unstressed syllables. Accordingly, the unstressed vowels of clitics will be preserved or harmonized, but crucially not reduced and deleted. Due to the low degrees of syllable complexity in these languages, junctural vowel clusters and associated processes are likely. Ultimately, this typology predicts different pathways for the evolution of morphology in the different phonological climates. Whereas morphologization in stress-based languages is accompanied by heavy reduction and leads to subminimal morphological markers, morphologization in mora- and syllable-based languages results in polysyllabic markers due to the lack of erosion in grammaticalization. The evidence compiled in this study calls for a serious reconsideration of the role of phonology in grammaticalization. Since erosion is not a universal concomitant of grammaticalization it cannot be considered a defining property. A subtler conception of grammaticalization has to incorporate the finding that associated sub-processes are subject to cross-linguistic variation, in our case linguistic rhythm. Accordingly, the findings of this study cast doubt on universal scenarios for language change such as the one enshrined in 'grammaticalization theory'.
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