The Prosodic Morphology of Jamaican Creole Iteratives1
نویسندگان
چکیده
The input of a reduplicative word formation process in Jamaican Creole (JC) is restricted prosodically. In this paper, the prosodic restrictions are analyzed in terms of constraints that are generally operative in JC prosody. The study therefore provides empirical support for the Prosodic Morphology Hypothesis of McCarthy & Prince 1986. Investigation of the constraints operative in JC prosody leads to two further theoretical conclusions. First, on the basis of stress facts and various morphophonological phenomena, it is argued that the JC foot is a moraic trochee, a member of a restrictive inventory of foot types. Second, the analysis of various restrictions on the reduplicative base requires a loosening of the principles governing the layering of prosodic categories within in hierarchical structure.
منابع مشابه
Tone inventories and tune-text alignments
In Autosegmental-Metrical accounts, the dichotomies that underlie most traditional typologies of tone and accent can be restated as two questions concerning tone inventory and tune-text alignment. First, are the pitch contours that contrast short utterances composed primarily of patterns specified in the lexicon (so-called “tone languages”) or are they morphemes in their own right (“intonation ...
متن کاملCaribbean Creoles and the Speech Community
The notion of the speech community has been one of the key concepts in sociolinguistics since its beginning, and yet at the same time remains one of the least satisfactory. This paper examines data from urban Jamaican Creole to shed light on it, in the process taking into account problems that have been raised by other Caribbean creolists in dealing with what Lawrence Carrington has aptly dubbe...
متن کاملSplit prosody and creole simplicity The case of Saramaccan
Saramaccan, an Atlantic creole whose lexifier languages are Portuguese and English, has a “split” prosodic system wherein the majority of its words are marked for pitch accent but an important minority are marked for tone. Split prosody is typologically unusual and runs counter to McWhorter’s (2001a) idea that creole languages should have “simpler” grammars than non-creole languages. However, t...
متن کاملCompeting Creole Transcripts on Trial
A criminal prosecution of Jamaican Creole (JC) speaking ‘posse’ (=gang) members in New York included evidence of recorded speech in JC. Clandestine recordings (discussions of criminal events, including narration of a homicide) were introduced at trial. Taped data were translated for prosecution by a non-linguist native speaker of JC. Defense disputed these texts and commissioned alternative tra...
متن کاملCreoles at the Intersection of Variable Processes:
(TD)-deletion is a well-known variable phonological process subject to the influence of both external social factors and internal structural constraints, including phonetic environmental and morphosyntactic effects. Its profile of variation has been widely investigated in American English dialects. However, it interacts with another grammatical process -the affixation of the regular Pasttense m...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
دوره شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2001