Academic literature on the topic 'Autosegmental Theory'

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Journal articles on the topic "Autosegmental Theory"

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Archangeli, Diana, and Rochelle Lieber. "An Integrated Theory of Autosegmental Processes." Language 64, no. 4 (December 1988): 791. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/414576.

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Spencer, Andrew. "Vowel harmony, neutral vowels and autosegmental theory." Lingua 69, no. 1-2 (June 1986): 3–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0024-3841(86)90076-8.

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Haile, Alemayehu, and Al Mtenje. "In defence of the autosegmental treatment of nonconcatenative morphology." Journal of Linguistics 24, no. 2 (September 1988): 433–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022226700011853.

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The aim of this paper is to defend the autosegmental account of nonconcatenative morphology originally proposed by McCarthy (1979, 1981), which has been seriously challenged by Hudson (1986). It is argued that an autosegmental analysis of nonconcatenative morphology such as that of Arabic still remains a better alternative than what Hudson proposes. We first present a brief overview of McCarthy's theory of non-concatenative morphology. We then review Hudson's criticisms of such an autosegmental approach to Arabic morphology and we end up by showing why his reanalysis does not constitute a better alternative than the criticized autosegmental account.
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Shih, Stephanie S., and Sharon Inkelas. "Autosegmental Aims in Surface-Optimizing Phonology." Linguistic Inquiry 50, no. 1 (January 2019): 137–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/ling_a_00304.

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We develop a novel optimization approach to tone. Its grammatical component consists of the similarity- and proximity-based correspondence constraint framework of Agreement by Correspondence theory (ABC). Its representational component, Q Theory, decomposes segments ( Q) into temporally ordered, quantized subsegments ( q), which comprise unitary sets of distinctive features, including tone. ABC+Q unites phonological alternations and static lexical patterns, as we illustrate with a programmatic survey of core tonal phenomena: assimilation, dissimilation, lexical tone melodies, and consonant-tone interaction. ABC+Q surmounts long-standing problems for autosegmental-era, multitiered representational approaches to tone, and unites tonal and segmental phonology under the modern umbrella of correspondence theory.
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Zaleska, Joanna. "Coalescence as autosegmental spreading and delinking." Phonology 37, no. 4 (November 2020): 697–735. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0952675720000317.

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Phonological coalescence, understood as a type of synchronic alternation in which two phonological elements seem to fuse into one, presents a prima facie challenge for versions of Optimality Theory that assume the principle of containment. If all underlying material has to be present in the output form, replacing two input elements with a single output element is not straightforward. I argue that, under the assumptions of Autosegmental Coloured Containment Theory, a distinct operation of coalescence is unnecessary, as all major types of coalescence patterns can be analysed in terms of (i) adding new association lines between some autosegmental nodes, and (ii) the underparsing of other nodes, leading to their phonetic non-realisation. The proposed analysis accurately reflects the heterogeneity of coalescence alternations, which are shown to fall into three different types.
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Goldsmith, John. "Vowel harmony in Khalkha Mongolian, Yaka, Finnish and Hungarian." Phonology Yearbook 2, no. 1 (May 1985): 253–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0952675700000452.

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The discussion of vowel harmony in this paper continues the theoretical discussion that was sparked by Clements' first proposals concerning an autosegmental treatment of vowel harmony in general (1980 [1976]). I will attempt to show that problems that arose in early autosegmental treatments of certain types of vowel harmony can be elegantly overcome and that autosegmental theory more generally provides an attractive framework for the treatment of vowel systems and vowel harmony. I will discuss three distinct types of systems here: the slightly asymmetrical system of Khalkha Mongolian, the canonical five-vowel system as it can be seen in Bantu (Yaka, in this case), and the well-known Finnish/Hungarian type of system. The kinds of advances made here answer, I believe, the critical comments made in Anderson (1980), in which significant sceptical questions are raised concerning whether the successes of autosegmental accounts of West African systems can be extended to other types of vowel harmony systems.
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A., Oladimeji Olaide, and Opoola Bolanle T. "Ikhin Tone and Nasality: Autosegmental Effects." Journal of Language Teaching and Research 12, no. 4 (July 1, 2021): 603–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.17507/jltr.1204.11.

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In generative phonology, tone and nasality are described as suprasegmental phonological units. This implies that their survival depends on the segments on which they are grounded. Thus, when a tone bearing unit or nasality bearing unit disappears, any of these segments also disappears. In autosegmental theory, however, tone or nasality survives after the deletion of segment to which it is attached. This phenomenon is termed ‘stability’ which is the foundation for autosegmental phonological theory. Stability is the survival of tone and nasality after the deletion of segments on which they are grounded. Tone and nasality exhibit stability in Ikhin, a North-Central Edoid language spoken in Edo State, South-South, Nigeria. Previous study on Ikhin dwells mainly on the phonetics of the language. This study, therefore, investigates phonological processes such as vowel elision, glide formation and nasalization with a view to determining the stability or otherwise of tone and nasality. This paper confirms that in Ikhin, any process that involves the removal of a tone bearing unit must relate to stability and relate to the creation of contour tones. The study further confirms that nasality remains stable even in the absence of segment to which it is linked. Based on available data, it is argued that the deletion of a Tone Bearing Unit (TBU) or a Nasality Bearing Unit (NBU) does not necessarily involve the deletion of tone or nasality. Infact, it usual does not. The study concludes that tone and nasality are independent segments. They are as independent as consonant and vowel.
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Mohd Rusli, Nur Farahkhanna. "Debukalisasi dan asimilasi fitur dalam Bahasa Kerinci: Analisis Teori Autosegmental." Pendeta Journal of Malay Language, Education and Literature 10 (December 24, 2019): 134–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.37134/pendeta.vol10.10.2019.

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Veysi, Elkhas, and Farangis Abbaszadeh. "The Templatic Syllable Patterns of Reduplication and Stem-affixing Inflections in the Classical Arabic Based on Prosodic Morphology Theory." Theory and Practice in Language Studies 6, no. 11 (November 1, 2016): 2196. http://dx.doi.org/10.17507/tpls.0611.18.

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A morpheme, is a set of feature matrices dominated by a single node. Reduplication or gemination is one of the productive morphological processes which have been studied inclusively in different languages and in the frame of different linguistic theories like Generative Grammar, Optimality Theory and Minimalist Program. McCarthy's prosodic theory is justified by an analysis of the formal properties of the system of verbal processes like reduplication are the primary or sole morphological operations. This theory of nonconcatenative morphology recognizing the root as a discontinuous constituent. Under the prosodic model, a morphological category which characteristically reduplicates simply stipulates an output template composed of vowel and consonant. Consonantal roots and vocalic melodies in Arabic, although they contain bundles of the same distinctive features, can nevertheless be represented on separate autosegmental tiers. This ensures that the association conventions for melodies can operate independently on these two tiers. Association of autosegments from different tiers to the same segments will be subject to the natural restriction that no segment receives multiple associations for the same nontonal feature.
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Gutt, Ernst-August. "A multi-tiered approach to Silt'i verb morphology." Studies in African Linguistics 16, no. 2 (August 1, 1985): 183–222. http://dx.doi.org/10.32473/sal.v16i2.107503.

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The replacement of the familiar linear phonological representations of the SPE-type by the multi-tiered configurations proposed in autosegmental phonology has enriched the theoretical apparatus available to the linguist and has opened the way for a better understanding of the workings of phonology. One particular strength of this theory is that it predicts the existence of distinct subsystems within a phonological system and offers a principled account of their interactions. Applied to the aspectual inflection of Silt'i verbs, the multi-tiered approach proves its potential by accommodating two distinct subsystems of inflection, viz. CV-pattern inflection and ablaut inflection, in a unified, principled description. From a more , general point of view, this paper sketches one possible way of integrating syllable theory as a distinct subsystem into an autosegmental system of phonology.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Autosegmental Theory"

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Hagberg, Lawrence Raymond. "An autosegmental theory of stress." Diss., The University of Arizona, 1993. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/186259.

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This study proposes that metrical constituents are inherently headless and stress is autosegmental. Chapter 2 argues that, since stress is the only diagnostic for the presence of a metrical head, the latter is redundant and must be eliminated from phonological theory. Further arguments for the inherent headlessness of feet are cited fl:om the theory of prosodic morphology (McCarthy and Prince 1990, Crowhurst 1991b) and from the facts of Yidinʸ stress (Dixon 1977, Crowhurst 1991a, Crowhurst and Hewitt, to appear). Next, stress is shown to exhibit the following auto segmental properties: stability (Bedouin Hijazi Arabic) , morphemic stress (Spanish, Turkish, Tagalog) and the ability to float (Mayo, Tagalog). After comparing the properties of stress with those of autosegments, it is concluded that stress is an autosegment. Assuming that feet can be either disyllabic, bimoraic or iambic (Hayes 1991), the above conclusion predicts the existence of five types of binary stressed feet. These are the left- and right-stressed syllabic foot, instantiated by Warao and Mayo, respectively, the left- and right-stressed moraic foot, instantiated by Cairene Arabic and Turkish, respectively, and the iambic foot, instantiated by Hixkaryana. The asymmetric nature of the iamb is attributed to the Weight-to-Stress Principle (Prince 1990), which allows stress to be assigned directly to heavy syllables. Furthermore, this principle predict6 all and only the attested types of unbounded stress systems. Chapter 5 argues that stressless feet and unfooted stresses are instantiated in Mayo, and the theories of Halle and Vergnaud 1987a, b and Hayes 1987, 1991 are shown to be incapable of accounting for these facts. The autosegmental theory of stress advances phonological theory in three ways. First, it eliminates most of the principles and devices which up to now have been used only to describe stress, leaving only the abstract stress autosegment which is itself subject to the principles of autosegmental theory. Second, this approach attributes many of the apparent differences between stress and tone to differences in their respective domains rather than differences in their formal properties. Third, the autosegmental theory of stress facilitates the formalization of a number of stress systems with heretofore complex analyses, including Yidinʸ, Mayo, Cairene Arabic, Turkish, Khalkha Mongolian and Tagalog.
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Bordal, Steien Guri. "Prosodie et contact de langues : le cas du système tonal du français centrafricain." Thesis, Paris 10, 2012. http://www.theses.fr/2012PA100162/document.

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L’objectif de cette étude est d’apporter une contribution aux recherches portant sur les effets prosodiques du contact de langues à travers l’étude du système prosodique du français centrafricain, une variété de français ayant émergé suite au contact avec une langue africaine à densité tonale maximale, le sango. La République centrafricaine est un pays extrêmement multilingue. Entre 60 et 100 langues y sont parlées, outre les deux langues officielles que constituent le sango – lingua franca, et le français – langue principale de l’enseignement et de l’administration publique. Dans la capitale, Bangui, le sango est la langue parlée d’ordinaire dans la vie quotidienne, tandis que le français s’utilise essentiellement dans des contextes professionnels. Cette étude se base sur des enregistrements de parole spontanée de 12 locuteurs francophones de Bangui. Des analyses acoustiques montrent que l’intonation du français centrafricain partage des caractéristiques communes avec le sango. La majorité de mots ont des patrons tonals qui restent inchangés quel que soit leur place dans l’énoncé, et chaque syllabe porte un ton. Le système se distingue ainsi considérablement du système intonatif du français européen où la courbe mélodique est contrainte au niveau post-lexical et dépend entre autres de facteurs rythmiques, syntaxiques et pragmatiques. La conclusion principale de cette étude est que le français centrafricain se classifie d’un point de vue typologique comme une langue à tons lexicaux. Il ressort que le système prosodique du français centrafricain est plus proche de celui du sango et que de celui du français européen. Les faits mis au jour dans cette thèse montrent que la prosodie peut changer de façon fondamentale dans une situation de contact de langue
This study is concerned with prosody and language contact. The fact that language contact induces change is well documented, but few studies focus on the prosodic effects of contact-induced change. The aim of this study is to provide a case study of the prosodic system of the contact variety Central African French, which has emerged from the contact between French and the African tone language, Sango.The Central African Republic is a multilingual country with between 60 to 100 different regional languages spoken within its borders in addition to two official languages, the lingua franca Sango and French. French has been the main language of education and of public administration since colonial times. In the capital Bangui, Sango is the most used language in everyday communication whereas French is spoken in professional contexts. This study is based on recordings of spontaneous speech of 12 French-speaking informants from Bangui. Acoustic analyses of the recordings show that the prosody of Central African French shares with Sango some fundamental characteristics: most words have fixed tonal patterns independently of their position in the sentence and every syllable carries a static tone. This system greatly differs from the system of European varieties of French, where the sentence melody is determined at the post-lexical level and depends on factors such as rhythm, syntax and pragmatics. The main conclusion of this study is that Central African French may be classified as a tone language and thus is endowed with a prosodic system that is closer to Sango than to European French. This finding suggests that intonation might change radically in contact situations ; the change is not only superficial but concerns the underlying system
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Neuschrank, Aline. "DO LATIM AO PORTUGUÊS: UM CONTINUUM À LUZ DE TEORIA FONOLÓGICA." Universidade Catolica de Pelotas, 2011. http://tede.ucpel.edu.br:8080/jspui/handle/tede/163.

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Made available in DSpace on 2016-03-22T17:26:35Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 DISSERTA__O ALINE VERS_O FINAL.pdf: 780834 bytes, checksum: f746a29c17a8c8f7b63721ba52676322 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2011-06-27
The importance of studying Latin to a better understanding of certain phonological aspects of Portuguese language goes further than just considering it as the mother language of our mother tongue . It is possible to high light the presence of Latin in our everyday usage of Portuguese through diachronic studies. Moreover, it is easier to understand many grammar rules by focusing the origin of the words analysed here. So, it is not coherent, as some people say, that Latin is a dead language , because Portuguese, as well as, Spanish, French, Italian, etc, is the survivance of vulgar Latin, which shows that the latin language is alive (REZENDE, 2003). Thus, this paper intends to present a description and an analisys of the phonological phenomenons along the Latin consonantal evolution system to Brazilian Potuguese, suported by the Autosegmental Theory, also considering traces that formed the internal structure of the consonants, and also the sonority scale in the organization syllabical items structure as determinants points to the phenomenon that occurred in the evolution of language. Through this approach it is possible not only to identify the behavior hierarchyc traces and the items of the Latin consonants system and those present in the Brazilian Portuguese, also to verify which phonological rules are in the consonantal composition of Brazilian Portuguese. From the proposed analysis, the process of palatalization proved to be the most productive in the diachrony of language, if compared to other phenomenons that contributed to the creation of the current system of consonants of Brazilian Portuguese: sound reinforcement, fricativization, degemination, palatalization and consonantization
A importância de estudar o latim para uma melhor compreensão de certos aspectos fonológicos da língua portuguesa vai além de apenas se considerar a língua latina como mãe de nossa língua materna. Através de estudos diacrônicos, é possível evidenciar a presença do latim no uso diário que fazemos do português, além de se poder compreender mais facilmente muitas regras gramaticais por meio de um olhar focado na origem das palavras que são alvo de análise. Assim, é incoerente a ideia defendida por alguns de que o latim é uma língua morta , já que o português, assim como o espanhol, o francês, o italiano, etc., é a sobrevivência do latim vulgar, o que mostra estar a língua latina mais do que viva (REZENDE, 2003). Logo, este trabalho objetiva a apresentação de uma descrição e análise dos fenômenos fonológicos ocorridos na evolução do sistema consonantal do latim ao português do Brasil (PB), tendo como suporte a Teoria Autossegmental, considerando os traços que formam a estrutura interna das consoantes e, ainda, a escala de sonoridade na organização dos constituintes silábicos como determinantes dos fenômenos que ocorreram na evolução da língua. Com essa abordagem, foi possível, além de identificar o comportamento dos traços hierarquicamente dispostos e constituintes do sistema de consoantes do latim e aqueles ainda presentes no PB, também verificar quais regras fonológicas se fizeram presentes na composição do sistema consonantal do português brasileiro. A partir da análise proposta, o processo de palatalização mostrou-se como o mais produtivo na diacronia da língua, em se comparando com os outros fenômenos que contribuíram para a constituição do atual sistema de consoantes do Português Brasileiro: sonorização, fricativização, degeminação, palatalização e consonantização
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Solomiac, Paul. "Phonologie et morphosyntaxe du Dzùùngoo de Samogohiri." Lyon 2, 2007. http://theses.univ-lyon2.fr/documents/lyon2/2007/solomiac_p.

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Langue parlée par moins de 20000 locuteurs près de la frontière ouest du Burkina Faso, le dzùùngoo, appelé aussi samogho, est une langue mandé nord ouest, de la grande famille Niger-Congo. Cette langue n'a jusqu'à présent fait l'objet d'aucune description. Aussi, notre travail, reposant sur des données lexicales, textuelles et audio, recueillies sur plusieurs années dans la ville de Samogohiri, se propose-t-il de fournir à la communauté scientifique une base descriptive à l'établissement d'un dictionnaire bilingue dzùùngoo – français qui devrait faire justice à la richesse du patrimoine culturel mondial que représente cette langue menacée de disparition. La problématique de départ de ce travail est donc lexicale. La structure interne du lexème est exposée dans la description phonologique dans laquelle sont développés l'inventaire des phonèmes (chapitre 3), la structure syllabique des mots (chapitres 2, 4 et 5), et leur structure tonale (chapitre 6). La description morphosyntaxique s'emploie principalement à définir et délimiter les différentes catégories grammaticales de mots auxquelles chaque item du lexique appartient (chapitre 9). L'organisation syntaxique des mots dans la phrase est ensuite considérée dans la présentation des différentes opérations morphosyntaxiques nominales (chapitre 10) et verbales (chapitre 11) ainsi que des différentes structures de prédication, non verbale (chapitre 12), et verbale (chapitre 13), et des structures marquées (chapitre 14) et structures complexes (chapitre 15). Dans une approche typologique et fonctionnelle, ce travail tente de placer la morphosyntaxe du dzùùngoo dans une perspective globale de la linguistique mandéisante
Spoken by less than 20,000 speakers living by the Malian border of Burkina Faso, Dzùùngoo (also called Samogho) is a North West Mande language of the Niger Congo family. This language has not yet been the object of a detailed linguistic description. Thus, based on extensive lexical, textual and audio data recorded in Samogohiri over a period of 20 years, we propose to provide the scientific community a descriptive foundation for the future development of a bilingual Dzùùngoo – French dictionary that should acknowledge the world cultural heritage that this endangered language represents. The initial issues for this work are therefore lexical. The internal structure of the lexeme is outlined in the phonological description where the inventory of phonemes (Chapter 3), the syllabic structure of the word (Chapters 2, 4 & 5) and its tonal structure (Chapter 6) are developed. The morphosyntactic description as such mainly focuses on defining and establishing the different grammatical categories to which every lexical item belongs (Chapter 9). The syntactic organization of the sentence is then considered in the presentation of the different nominal (Chapter 10) and verbal (Chapter 11) operations, as well as different predication structures, non verbal (Chapter 12) and verbal (Chapter 13), marked structures (Chapter 14) and complex structures (Chapter 15). Using a typological and functional approach, this description is an attempt to put Dzùùngoo morphosyntax in the global perspective of mande linguistics
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Books on the topic "Autosegmental Theory"

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An integrated theory of autosegmental processes. Albany: State University of New York Press, 1987.

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A, Goldsmith John. Autosegmental and metrical phonology. Oxford, UK: B. Blackwell, 1990.

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An autosegmental approach to Shilluk phonology. Dallas, TX: Summer Institute of Linguistics, 1992.

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Autosegmental representation in a declarative constraint-based framework. New York: Garland, 1997.

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Planar phonology and morphology. New York: Garland Pub., 1991.

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Compensatory lengthening: Phonetics, phonology, diachrony. New York: Routledge, 2002.

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Parasession on Autosegmental and Metrical Phonology (1987 Chicago, Ill.). Papers from the 23rd annual regional meeting of the Chicago Linguistic Society. Chicago: The Society, 1987.

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Haas, Wim de. A formal theory of vowel coalescence: A case study of ancient Greek. Dordrecht, Holland: Foris, 1988.

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A theory of syllabification and segmental alternation: With studies on the phonology of French, German, Tonkawa and Yawelmani. Tübingen: M. Niemeyer, 1993.

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Kornai, András. Formal phonology. New York: Garland, 1995.

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Book chapters on the topic "Autosegmental Theory"

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Harris, James. "Autosegmental phonology an dliquid assimilation in Havana Spanish." In Current Issues in Linguistic Theory, 127. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 1985. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/cilt.36.09har.

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"Autosegmental phonology and underspecification theory." In History of the Language Sciences / Geschichte der Sprachwissenschaften / Histoire des sciences du langage, Part 3, edited by Sylvain Auroux, E. F. K. Koerner, Hans-Josef Niederehe, and Kees Versteegh. Berlin • New York: Walter de Gruyter, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9783110167368.3.35.2280.

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"Autosegmental spreading in Optimality Theory." In Tones and Features, 195–222. De Gruyter Mouton, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9783110246223.195.

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"The autosegmental nature of tone, and its analysis in Optimality Theory." In Tone, 65–104. Cambridge University Press, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cbo9781139164559.009.

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"Chapter 8: The mapping of autosegments." In A theory of phonological weight, 99–118. Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter, 1985. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9783110854794-009.

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Conference papers on the topic "Autosegmental Theory"

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Dilley, Laura, and Mara Breen. "An enhanced autosegmental-metrical theory (AM+) facilitates phonetically transparent prosodic annotation." In TAL2018, Sixth International Symposium on Tonal Aspects of Languages. ISCA: ISCA, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.21437/tal.2018-14.

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Chapakiya, Suraiya. "Syllable Structure of Patani Malay Dialect: An Analysis Using Autosegmental Theory." In International Conference on Community Development (ICCD 2020). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/assehr.k.201017.154.

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