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LING 580 E:Problems in Linguistics(3 credits)

“Prosodic Morphology and the Phonology-Morphology Interface”

Winter 2007

InstructorLaura W. McGarrity

Office:Padelford A210-B

Office Hours:TTH 11:30a-12:30p

Office Phone: 221-7367

Email:

Classroom:SmithHall (SMI) 111

Meeting time:M 3:30 – 5:50pm

Course website:http://faculty.washington.edu/lauramcg/courses/ling580/home.shtml

Course Description:

Prosodic Morphology is the study of morphological processes that are crucially characterized by a particular output prosodic shape (defined in terms of moras, syllables, feet, and prosodic words) rather than by a string of output segments. Examples of Prosodic Morphology include reduplication,infixation, truncation, root-and-pattern morphology, and minimal (and maximal) word effects. Assignments will include in-class presentations on the readings, and a final research paper and paper presentation on a topic within Prosodic Morphology. For this course, familiarity with Optimality Theory is assumed. (Suggested prerequisite: LING 452)

Required readings:

There is no required textbook for the class. All of the readings for the class will be made available to you ahead of time either on the course website (as a PDF document), online at the Rutgers Optimality Archive (ROA –http://roa.rutgers.edu/index.php3), or in hard copy format for you to photocopy.

Students are expected to come to class having read all of the readings assigned for each week.

Suggested supplementary textbooks:

Downing, Laura. 2006. Canonical Forms in Prosodic Morphology. Oxford: OxfordUniversity Press.

Kager, René, van der Hulst, Harry and Zonneveld, Wim. 1999. The Prosody-Morphology Interface. Cambridge, UK: CambridgeUniversity Press.

Assignments:

1. Reading presentations(25% of course grade)

Each student will be responsible for presenting and leading the class discussion on your choice ofthree of the assigned readings. Because each student in the class will have read the assigned readings, these presentations should not simply regurgitate the content of the readings, but should clearly summarize and present the main points of the readings as well as generate thoughtful discussion. Use of supplementary materials, such as handouts, prepared overheads/slides, or group exercises, is highly recommended.

2. Final paper(35% of course grade)

Each student must choose one of the following two options for a final 10-15 page research paper:

i)Original research: Identify and analyze a prosodic morphology problem from a language that you have worked with or have researched.

For this paper, the starting point will be data from a language that you research that has not been discussed (or at least not fully analyzed) in the course readings. Using source material such as a grammar, dictionary, dissertation, or field notes, you will need to identify, present, discuss, and analyze some aspect of the prosodic morphological system of the language within a derivational or optimality theoretic framework. The key aspect of this paper is for you to present your own analysis of a prosodic morphology problem from this language, demonstrating that you’ve understood the concepts discussed in class and can apply them to relevant data.

ii)Literature review:Analyze, discuss and critique (at least) two additional readings on a particular topic within prosodic morphology.

For this paper, you must analyze, discuss, and review the literature on a particular topic of prosodic morphology using (at least) two additional readings not discussed in class. These readings may either involve two differing analyses of a prosodic morphology problem with the same language (e.g., a comparison of how Authors X and Y account for the palatalizing 3rd pers. sg. morpheme in Zoque), or they may involve two readings of the same type of prosodicmorphology within two different languages (e.g., a comparison of infixing reduplication in Tagalog and Cebuano). You will need to present the facts about the basic problem(s), summarizing the main points using relevant data and examples, along with a brief description of the different analyses and how they differ or compare. A good starting point for finding relevant readings for your paper is to mine the reference pages of the readings from class, or do a keyword search on the topic you are most interested in on the ROA or the Linguistics and Language Behavior Abstracts (LLBA -- on the UW Libraries webpage).

Your final paper topic must be approved by me by the fifth week of the quarter (Jan. 31).Topic approval requires meeting with me during my office hours. To facilitate the approval process, you should identify a couple of possible paper topics for me to consider. To help you structure your time on your paper, additional intermediate deadlines have been set up throughout the quarter.

**The paper is due Wednesday, March14 following the oral presentation (see below for more on the presentation requirement). It should include an abstract of no more than 200 words and will be evaluated for its clarity, organization, data presentation, analytical validity, and professional style (i.e., references, in-text citation, etc.). This paper does not call for fancy theoretical machinery. Of greater interest is your ability to research, define and present a problem and to successfully bring data to bear in addressing the problem.

3. Oral presentation of final paper(25% of course grade)

Each student will present a formal (timed), professional-style presentation of their final paper onWednesday, March7, the final day of class. Fifteen minutes will be allotted for each presentation with an additional 10 minutes for discussion and commentary. A handout (recommended) or powerpoint presentation with relevant examples, displays, and selected references should accompany the presentation. A preliminary draft of the handout must be submitted to me for feedback and corrections no later than Friday, March 3 prior to the scheduled presentations.

A good handout should allow audience members to (re)construct the paper on their own, although text should be kept to a minimum. Headings, displays, and data sets should be numbered, labeled and organized to illustrate individual points clearly. Students are strongly encouraged to practice their presentations ahead of time. The presentation will be evaluated for its clarity, organization, speaking style, usefulness of the handout, compliance with the time limit, and ability to handle questions. Helpful guidelines for giving a presentation and preparing a handout can be found on the LSA website:

4. Class participation(15% of course grade)

Students are expected to contribute regularly to class discussions. Completing the reading assignments in advance will be necessary to facilitate those discussions. In a small seminar class such as this, regular attendance, while not strictly required, is crucial for productive class discussions. Whenever possible, students should notify the instructor ahead of time as a courtesy if they must miss a class for any reason.

Grading

The following grading scale will be used (based on the UW grading scale):

A4.0 – 3.9 (100 – 94%)C2.1 – 1.9 (76 – 74%)

A-3.8 – 3.5(93 – 90%) C-1.8 – 1.5 (73 – 70%)

B+3.4 – 3.2 (89 – 87%)D+1.4 – 1.2 (69 – 67%)

B3.1 – 2.9 (86 – 84%)D1.1 – 0.9 (66 – 64%)

B-2.8 – 2.5 (83 – 80%)D-0.8 – 0.7(63 – 62%)

C+2.4 – 2.2 (79 – 77%)F< .7(< 62%)

Calendar:

Week DateTopicReadings

11/3Introduction

Course overview, syllabus

Introduction,basic conceptsof prosodic morphology

21/10Introduction to Prosodic Morphology

Continue introduction to prosodic morphologyKager et al. 1999 (intro)

Downing 2006 (chapter 1)

Pre-OT templatic theoryMcCarthy & Prince 1994b

31/17Reduplication

BR-correspondence, over-/underapplicationMcCarthy & Prince 1999

Case study: WashoYu 2005

Case study: Maŋarayi Kurisu & Sanders 1999

41/24Infixation

Tagalog um-infixationKlein 2005

Infixation and precedence faithfulnessHorwood 2002

51/31Truncation, subtractive morphology

TruncationBenua 1995, Sanders 1999

SubtractionHorwood 2001

Topics for research paper must be approved by this date

62/7Nonconcatenative Morphology

Featural affixation (from Akinlabi 1996):

Chaha LabializationAkinlabi 1996, §3

Nuer MutationAkinlabi 1996, §4

Zoque PalatalizationAkinlabi 1996, §5

Terena NasalizationAkinlabi 1996, §7

72/14Nonconcatenative Morphology

Pre-OT:Templatic morphology in Arabic rootsMcCarthy Prince 1990

OT: Optimal Paradigms (revisits Arabic verb paradigms)McCarthy 2005

List of references and paragraph about paper organization due

82/21Word minimality and maximality effects

Word minimality (emergence of the unmarked)McCarthy & Prince 1994a, §4-5

Word maximality (in Maori passives)de Lacy 2004

Something in between (recursive PrWd)Kager 1996

92/28Dominant affixes / anti-faithfulness

Anti-faithfulness in morpho-phonological operationsAlderete 2001

103/7Conclusions/Presentations

Oral presentations of final projects

Course evaluations

Draft of presentation handouts must be emailed to me by Monday 3/5

113/14Wednesday -- Final papers due

Assigned Readings:

The following assigned readings are/will be made available online, eitheron the course website, through the UW library, or as a download from the Rutgers Optimality Archive (ROA)http://roa.rutgers.edu/index.php3.

Akinlabi, Akinbiyi. 1996. Featural affixation. Journal of Linguistics 32. 239-289. [ROA-185]

Alderete, John. 2001. Dominance effects as transderivational anti-faithfulness. Phonology 18.201-253. [ROA-407].

Benua, Laura. 1995. Identity effects in morphological truncation. In Jill Beckman, Laura Walsh Dickey, & Suzanne Urbanczyk, eds., University of Massachusetts Occasional Papers in Linguistics 18: Papers in Optimality Theory. Amherst, MA: Graduate Linguistic Student Association. Pp. 77-136. [ROA-74].

Downing, Laura. 2006. Canonical Forms in Prosodic Morphology. Oxford: OxfordUniversity Press.

Horwood, Graham. 2001. Anti-faithfulness and subtractive morphology. Unpublished manuscript.Rutgers University,New Brunswick, NJ. [ROA-466]

Horwood, Graham. 2002. Precedence faithfulness governs morpheme position. In Proceedings of the West Coast Conference of Formal Linguistics 21, ed. by L. Mikkelsen and C. Potts. Somerville, MA: Cascadilla Press. [ROA-527]

Kager, René. 1996. Stem disyllabicity in Guugu Yimidhirr. In Dam Phonology: HIL Phonology Papers II, ed. by M. Nespor & N. Smith, 59-101. Den Haag: Holland Institute of Generative Linguistics. [ROA-70]

Kager, René, van der Hulst, Harry and Zonneveld, Wim. 1999. The Prosody-Morphology Interface. Cambridge, UK: CambridgeUniversity Press.

Klein, Thomas. 2005. Infixation and segmental constraint effects: UM and IN in Tagalog, Chamorro, and Toba Batak. Lingua 115.959-995. [ROA-659]

Kurisu, Kazutaka and Sanders, Nathan. 1999. Infixal nominal reduplication in Maŋarayi. In Phonology at Santa Cruz 6, ed. by Adam Ussishkin, Dylan Herrick, Kazutaka Kurisu, and Nathan Sanders, 47–56. (

de Lacy, Paul. 2004. Maximal words and the Maori passive. In Optimality Theory in Phonology: A Reader, ed. by John McCarthy, 495-512. Malden, MA: Blackwell.

McCarthy, John. 2005. Optimal paradigms. In Paradigms in Phonological Theory, ed. by Laura Downing, Tracy Alan Hall and Renate Raffelsiefen, 170-210. Oxford: OxfordUniversity Press. [ROA-485]

McCarthy, John J. and Prince, Alan. 1986/1996. Prosodic Morphology 1986. Technical Report no. RUCCS-TR-32, RutgersUniversityCenter for Cognitive Science. New Brunswick, NJ: RutgersUniversityCenter for Cognitive Science. [ROA-]

McCarthy, John J. and Prince, Alan.1990. Prosodic morphology and templatic morphology. In Perspectives on Arabic linguistics II: Papers from the Second Annual Symposium on Arabic Linguistics, ed. Mushira Eid and John J. McCarthy, pp. 1-54. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. (http://people.umass.edu/jjmccart/template.pdf)

McCarthy, John J. and Prince, Alan. 1994a. The Emergence of the Unmarked. In Proceedings of NELS 24, ed. by M. Gonzàlez , 333-379. [ROA-13]

McCarthy, John J. and Prince, Alan.1994b. Prosodic Morphology. In A Handbook of Phonological Theory, ed. by John Goldsmith, 318–366. Oxford: Blackwell. (http://people.umass.edu/jjmccart/handbook.pdf)

McCarthy, John J. and Prince, Alan. 1999. Faithfulness and Identity in Prosodic Morphology. In The Prosody-Morphology Interface, ed. by René Kager, Harry van der Hulst and Wim Zonneveld, 218-309. Cambridge: CambridgeUniversity Press.[ROA-216]

Sanders, Nathan. 1999. Intra-representational correspondence and truncation. Unpublished manuscript, Universtiy of California, Santa Cruz. [ROA-394]

Yu, Alan C. L. 2005. Quantity, stress, and reduplication in Washo. Phonology 22.437-475. (http://home.uchicago.edu/%7Eaclyu/papers/Phonology22.pdf)

Additional references:

Students are encouraged to consult the following readings in the course of your research for further details and background relating to course topics.

Alderete, John D.1999. Morphologically Governed Accent in Optimality Theory. Doctoral dissertation, University of Massachusetts, Amherst. [ROA-309]

Gnanadesikan. Amalia. 1997. Phonology with Ternary Scales. Doctoral dissertation, University of Massachusetts, Amherst. [ROA-195]

Kurisu, Kazutaka. 2001. The Phonology of Morpheme Realization. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Santa Cruz. [ROA-490]

Lombardi, Linda and John McCarthy. 1991. Prosodic circumscription in Choctaw morphology. Phonology 8, 37-71. (http://people.umass.edu/jjmccart/choctaw.pdf)

McCarthy, John J.1981. A prosodic theory of nonconcatenative morphology. Linguistic Inquiry 12, 373-418. [Excerpts reprinted in John Goldsmith, ed., Essential Readings in Phonology. Oxford: Blackwell. Pp. 162.184, 1999.]

McCarthy, John J. 2002. A Thematic Guide to Optimality Theory. Cambridge: CambridgeUniversity Press.

McCarthy, John J. (ed.) 2004. Optimality Theory in Phonology: A Reader. Malden, MA: Blackwell.

McCarthy, John J. and Prince, Alan. 1993. Prosodic Morphology I: Constraint interaction and satisfaction. Technical Report no. RUCCS-TR-3, RutgersUniversityCenter for Cognitive Science. New Brunswick, NJ: RutgersUniversityCenter for Cognitive Science. [ROA-482]

McCarthy, John J. and Prince, Alan. 1995. Faithfulness and reduplicative identity. In University of Massachusetts Occasional Papers in Linguistics 18: Papers in Optimality Theory, ed. by Jill Beckman, Suzanne Urbanczyk and Laura Walsh Dickey, 249-384. Amherst: GLSA. [ROA-60]

Prince, Alan and Smolensky, Paul.1993/2004. Optimality theory: Constraint interaction in generative grammar. Malden, MA: Blackwell. [ROA-537]

Spaelti, Philip. 1997. Dimensions of variation in multi-pattern reduplication. Doctoral Dissertation, University of California, Santa Cruz. [ROA-311]

Wolf, Matthew. 2005. For an autosegmental theory of mutation. Proceedings of the 24th West Coast Conference on Formal Linguistics, ed. by John Alderete, Chung-hye Han, and Alexei Kochetov. Somerville, MA: Cascadilla Press. [ROA-754]

Yu, Alan C. L. 2003. The morphology and phonology of infixation. Doctoral Dissertation, University of California, Berkeley.