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1

Tone in lexical phonology. Dordrecht: D. Reidel Pub. Co., 1986.

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2

Gussenhoven, Carlos. The phonology of tone and intonation. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004.

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3

Poser, William J. Phonetics and phonology of tone and intonation in Japanese. Stanford, Calif: CSLI, 2000.

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4

Cabrera-Abreu, Mercedes. A phonological model for intonation without low tone. Bloomington, IN: IULC Publications, 2000.

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5

Hung, Tony T. N. Syntactic and semantic aspects of Chinese tone sandhi. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Linguistics Club Publications, 1989.

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6

Hung, Tony T. N. Syntactic and semantic aspects of Chinese tone sandhi. Bloomington, Ind: Indiana University Linguistics Club, 1989.

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7

Wetterlin, Allison. Tonal accents in Norwegian: Phonology, morphology and lexical specification. Berlin: De Gruyter, 2010.

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8

Dai yu de sheng diao ge ju he yuan yin ge ju. Chengdu Shi: Sichuan da xue chu ban she, 2007.

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9

Metrical phonology and phonological structure: German and English. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1985.

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10

The sonority controversy. Boston: de Gruyter Mouton, 2012.

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11

Chungbu tonghaean pangŏn ŭi sŏngjo pigyŏ. Sŏul: Kŭl Nurim, 2006.

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12

Devonish, Hubert. Talking in tones: A study of tone in Afro-European Creole languages. Christ Church, Barbados: Caribbean Academic Publications, 1989.

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13

Intonational phonology. 2nd ed. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008.

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14

Intonational phonology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996.

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15

The effects of duration and sonority on contour tone distribution: A typological survey and formal analysis. New York: Routledge, 2002.

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16

Shi san shi ji Dai Tai yu yan de yu yin xi tong yan jiu. Beijing Shi: Min zu chu ban she, 2007.

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17

Poser, William J. Phonetics and Phonology of Tone and Intonation in Japanese. Center for the Study of Language and Inf, 2004.

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18

der, Hulst Harry van, and Snider Keith L, eds. The Phonology of tone: The representation of tonal register. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter, 1993.

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19

Downing, Laura J., and Al Mtenje. Tonal Phonology: Lexical Tone Patterns. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198724742.003.0006.

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Like the vast majority of Bantu languages, Chichewa is a tone language. The chapter begins with a brief introduction to the Chichewa tone system. The lexical tone patterns for noun and verb stems are taken up next. Lexical tones do not always surface on their input sponsor syllable due to the application of tone processes such as tone doubling, tone plateauing, and final retraction. These processes, all conditioned by phrase penult lengthening, are defined and illustrated in detail in this chapter, along with the OCP-motivated process, Meeussen’s Rule. The tonal properties of clitics and clitic-like nominal modifiers are shown to motivate the process of tone shift. The phonetics of tone and the accentual properties of the Chichewa tone system are discussed in the concluding sections.
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20

Wetterlin, Allison. Tonal Accents in Norwegian: Phonology, morphology and lexical Specification. De Gruyter, Inc., 2011.

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21

Hulst, Harry Van Der. The Phonology of Tone: The Representation of Tonal Register (Linguistic Models, No 17). Mouton de Gruyter, 1993.

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22

Intonational Phonology (Cambridge Studies in Linguistics). 2nd ed. Cambridge University Press, 2008.

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23

Interaction of Tone with Voicing and Foot Structure: Evidence from Kera Phonetics and Phonology. CSLI Publications/Center for the Study of Language & Information, 2011.

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24

1979-, Yan Xiaobin, ed. Optimality Theory and the Phrasing of Chinese Tone Sandhi: Han yu lian xu bian diao yu de you xuan lun yan jiu. 2010.

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25

Downing, Laura J., and Al Mtenje. The Phonology of Chichewa. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198724742.001.0001.

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Bantu languages have played and continue to play an important role as a source of data illustrating core phonological processes—vowel harmony, nasal place assimilation, postnasal laryngeal alternations, tonal phenomena such as high tone spread and the OCP, prosodic morphology, and the phonology–syntax interface. Chichewa, in particular, has been a key language in the development of theoretical approaches to these phonological phenomena. This book provides thorough descriptive coverage, presented in a clear, atheoretical manner, of the full range of phonological phenomena of Chichewa. Less well-studied topics—such as positional asymmetries in the distribution of segments, the phonetics of tone, and intonation—are also included. The book surveys, where relevant, important recent theoretical approaches to phonological problems—such as vowel harmony, the phonology–syntax interface, focus prosody, and reduplication—where Chichewa data is routinely referred to in the theoretical literature. The book will therefore serve as a resource for phonologists—at all levels and working in different theoretical frameworks—who are interested in the processes discussed. Because many of the phonological processes in Chichewa are conditioned by particular morphological or syntactic contexts, the book should also be of interest to linguists working on the interfaces. As there are almost no other monographs on the phonology of Bantu languages available, this book serves as an excellent introduction to core issues in the phonology of Bantu languages.
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26

Ota, Mitsuhiko. Prosodic Phenomena. Edited by Jeffrey L. Lidz, William Snyder, and Joe Pater. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199601264.013.5.

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Prosodic phenomena such as stress, tone, and intonation have been the focus of much developmental research as well as theoretical work in phonology. This review presents an overview of research that explores the relationship between the development of prosodic phenomena and linguistic models of phonological structure, particularly, metrical stress theory and autosegmental phonology. The review surveys what is currently known about the developmental course of stress, tone, and intonation in infants and children, introduces research that investigates the role of organizational principles of phonological structure in the acquisition of these prosodic phenomena, and discusses the evidence and arguments for this approach toward understanding phonological acquisition.
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27

Ryan, Kevin M. Prosodic Weight. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198817949.001.0001.

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Prosodic weight plays a central role in metrical systems, including stress, poetic meter, prosodic word minimality, and prosodic end-weight. In each, constraints regulate the interaction of weight and phonological strength. For example, in English, increasingly heavy syllables are increasingly likely to attract stress. Depending on the language and system, weight can be binary (heavy vs. light), higher n-ary (ternary, etc., but still categorical), or gradient (continuous on a ratio scale). Gradient weight is widely attested in stress, meter, and end-weight. The book emphasizes the typology and analysis of complex and gradient scales for weight as well as properties of weight that obtain universally across languages, systems, and scales. For example, across phenomena, greater sonority contributes to weight in the syllable rime but detracts from it in the onset. Scales are analyzed in terms of prominence mapping (varying stressability of elements) as opposed to moraic coercion. Prosodic minimality is analyzed in the context of larger prosodic constituents, revealing new issues. The book also offers the first detailed study of a minimum to which only certain final consonants contribute. Syllable weight in metrics is treated extensively, as complex weight in meter has been largely overlooked previously. Finally, prosodic end-weight is argued to be driven by phrasal stress, manifesting ultimately the same stress–weight interface as does word phonology. Among other things, this analysis captures that prosodic end-weight is confined to prosodically head-final contexts. Finally, complex and gradient weight brings questions concerning the phonetics-phonology interface into sharp focus.
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