Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-lnqnp Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T00:36:50.706Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Word-final nasal velarisation in Spanish1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 August 2012

MICHAEL RAMSAMMY*
Affiliation:
The University of Manchester
*
Author's address: School of Languages, Linguistics and Cultures, The University of Manchester, Samuel Alexander Building, Oxford Road, Manchester M13 9PL, UK[email protected]

Abstract

In velarising dialects of Spanish, nasal place contrasts neutralise to [ŋ] word-finally. However, whereas velarisation applies transparently in word-final prepausal environments, place neutralisation ‘overapplies’ to stem-final presuffixal nasals and to word-final nasals which resyllabify into onset position across word boundaries. Yet since previous analyses of Velarising Spanish have been based exclusively on theory-led interpretations of impressionistic data, doubts exist as to whether word-final nasals in velarising dialects are consistently realised as [ŋ] (Baković 2000). The first goal of this paper therefore is to submit the claims put forward in these analyses to empirical testing. Experiments using electropalatography confirm that speakers of Velarising Spanish produce robustly dorso-velar nasals in word-final environments; this result refutes the claim that word-final nasals are placeless in velarising varieties. Secondly, because opaque instances of nasal place neutralisation pose challenges for Optimality Theory (OT), I compare two approaches to modelling the nasal alternations in Velarising Spanish, namely Output–Output correspondence in classic OT and a cyclic analysis in Stratal OT. This comparison reveals that classic OT cannot account for the opaque patterns without stipulating fixed OO-constraint rankings. By contrast, the stratal model straightforwardly predicts the occurrence of both opacity effects on the basis of general architectural principles.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2012

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

[1]

I would like to thank Ricardo Bermúdez-Otero, Yuni Kim, Nigel Vincent and three anonymous JL referees for their helpful comments on earlier drafts of this paper. I alone am responsible for any remaining errors.

References

REFERENCES

Baković, Eric. 2000. Nasal place neutralization in Spanish. In Fox, Michelle Minnick, Williams, Alexander & Kaiser, Elsi (eds.), The 24th Annual Penn Linguistics Colloquium 7.1, 112. Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania.Google Scholar
Bermúdez-Otero, Ricardo. 2007. Morphological structure and phonological domains in Spanish denominal derivation. In Martínez-Gil & Colina (eds.), 278311.Google Scholar
Bermúdez-Otero, Ricardo. 2011. Cyclicity. In Van Oostendorp, Marc, Ewen, Colin, Hume, Elizabeth & Rice, Keren (eds.), The Blackwell companion to phonology, vol. 4, 20192048. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.Google Scholar
Bermúdez-Otero, Ricardo. Forthcoming a. The Spanish lexicon stores stems with theme vowels, not roots with inflectional class features. Ms., The University of Manchester.Google Scholar
Bermúdez-Otero, Ricardo. Forthcoming b. Stratal Optimality Theory. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Bonet, Eulàlia 2007. Gender allomorphy and epenthesis in Spanish. In Martínez-Gil & Colina (eds.), 312338.Google Scholar
Colina, Sonia. 2003. The status of word-final [e] in Spanish. Southwest Journal of Linguistics 22, 87107.Google Scholar
de Lacy, Paul. 2006. Markedness: Reduction and preservation in phonology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
D'Introno, Franceso & Sosa, Juan Manuel. 1988. Elisió de nasal o nasalizaciõ de vocal eŋ caraqueño. In Hammond, Robert M. & Resnick, Melvyn C. (eds.), Studies in Caribbean Spanish dialectology, 2434. Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press.Google Scholar
Gibbon, Fiona E., Hardcastle, William J. & Nicolaidis, Katerina. 1993. Temporal and spatial aspects of lingual coarticulation in /kl/ sequences: A cross-linguistic investigation. Language and Speech 36, 261277.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gibbon, Fiona E. & Nicolaidis, Katerina. 1999. Palatography. In Hardcastle, William J. & Hewlett, Nigel (eds.), Coarticulation in speech production: Theory, data and techniques, 229245. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hammond, Robert M. 1976. The velar nasal in rapid Cuban Spanish. In Lantolf, James P., Wattman-Frank, Francine & Guitart, Jorge M. (eds.), Colloquium on Spanish and Luso-Brazilian Linguistics, 1936. Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press.Google Scholar
Hardcastle, William J. & Barry, William. 1989. Articulatory and perceptual factors in /l/ vocalisation in English. Journal of the International Phonetic Association 15, 317.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hardcastle, William J., Gibbon, Fiona E. & Nicolaidis, Katerina. 1991. EPG data reduction methods and their implications for studies of lingual coarticulation. Journal of Phonetics 19, 251266.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hardcastle, William J., Jones, Wilf, Knight, Colin, Trudgeon, Ann & Calder, G.. 1989. New developments in electropalatography: A state-of-the-art report. Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics 3, 138.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harris, James W. 1984. Autosegmental Phonology, Lexical Phonology, and Spanish nasals. In Aronoff, Mark, Oehrle, Richard, Kelley, Frances & Stephens, Bonnie Wilker (eds.), Language sound and structure, 6782. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Hayes, Bruce. 2000. Gradient well-formedness in Optimality Theory. In Dekkers, Joost, van der Leeuw, Frank & van de Weijer, Jeroen (eds.), Optimality Theory: Phonology, syntax, and acquisition, 88120. Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Honorof, Douglas N. 1999. Articulatory gestures and Spanish nasal assimilation. Ph.D. dissertation, Yale University.Google Scholar
Itô, Junko & Mester, Armin. 2003. Japanese morphophonemics: Markedness and word structure. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jones, Wilf & Hardcastle, William J.. 1995. New developments in EPG3 Software. European Journal of Disorders of Communication 30, 183192.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kiparsky, Paul. 1982. Lexical Morphology and Phonology. In Yang, In-Seok (ed.), Linguistics in the morning calm: Selected papers from SICOL-1981, vol. 1, 391. Seoul: Hanshin.Google Scholar
Kiparsky, Paul. 2000. Opacity and cyclicity. The Linguistic Review 17, 351366.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kochetov, Alexei & Colantoni, Laura. 2011a. Place vs. stricture in Spanish nasal assimilation. West Coast Conference on Formal Linguistics (WCCFL) 28, University of Southern California. http://sites.google.com/site/wccfl28pro/kochetov-colantoni (retrieved 21 May 2012).Google Scholar
Kochetov, Alexei & Colantoni, Laura. 2011b. Spanish nasal assimilation revisited: A cross-dialect electropalatographic study. Laboratory Phonology 2, 487523.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kochetov, Alexei & Pouplier, Marianne. 2008. Phonetic variability and grammatical knowledge: An articulatory study of Korean place assimilation. Phonology 25, 399431.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Liker, Marko & Gibbon, Fiona E.. 2008. Tongue palate contact patterns of velar stops in normal adult English speakers. Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics 22, 137148.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lombardi, Linda. 2002. Coronal epenthesis and markedness. Phonology 19, 219251.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Martínez-Gil, Fernando & Colina, Sonia (eds.). 2007. Optimality-theoretic studies in Spanish phonology. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McAuliffe, Megan J., Robb, Michael P. & Murdoch, Bruce E.. 2007. Acoustic and perceptual analysis of speech adaptation to an artificial palate. Clinincal Linguistics & Phonetics 21, 885894.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Michnowicz, Jim. 2006. El habla de Yucatám: Final -m in a dialect in contact. In Holmquist, Jonathan, Lorenzino, Augusto & Sayahi, Lotfi (eds.), The Third Workshop on Spanish Sociolinguistics (WSS3), 3843. Somerville, MA: Cascadilly Proceedings Project.Google Scholar
Mohanan, K. P. 1986. The theory of Lexical Phonology. Dordrecht: Reidel.Google Scholar
Navarro Tomás, Tomás. 1957. Manual de pronunciación española. New York: Hafner Publishing Co.Google Scholar
Nevins, Andrew & Plaster, Keith. 2008. Review of Paul de Lacy (2006). Journal of Linguistics 44, 770781.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nicolaidis, Katerina. 2001. An electropalatographic study of Greek spontaneous speech. Journal of the International Phonetic Association 31, 6785.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nolan, Francis, Holst, Tara & Kühnert, Barbara. 1996. Modelling [s] to [ʃ] accommodation in English. Journal of Phonetics 24, 113137.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Núñez-Cedeño, Rafael. 1980. Procesos finales en el español de Santo Domingo. Nueva Revista de Filología Hispánica 29, 128138.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Olive, Joseph P., Greenwood, Alice & Coleman, John. 1993. Acoustics of American English speech: A dynamic approach. New York: Springer.Google Scholar
Pater, Joe. 2009. Weighted constraints in generative linguistics. Cognitive Science 33, 9991035.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Penny, Ralph. 2002. A history of the Spanish language, 2nd edn.Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Piñeros, Carlos Eduardo. 2007. The phonology of nasal consonants in five Spanish dialects. In Martínez-Gil & Colina (eds.), 146171.Google Scholar
Pouplier, Marianne, Hoole, Philip & Scobbie, James M.. 2011. Investigating the asymmetry of English sibilant assimilation: Acoustic and EPG data. Laboratory Phonology 2, 133.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ramsammy, Michael. 2011. An acoustic investigation of nasal place neutralisation in Spanish: Default place assignment and phonetic underspecification. In Herschensohn, Julia (ed.), Romance Linguistics 2010: Selected papers from the 40th Linguistic Symposium on Romance Linguistics (LSRL), 3348. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ramsammy, Michael. 2012. The realisation of coda nasals in Spanish. Ph.D. dissertation, The University of Manchester.Google Scholar
Recasens, Daniel. 2004. Darkness in [l] as a scalar phonetic property: Implications for phonology and articulatory control. Clinincal Linguistics & Phonetics 18, 593603.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Recasens, Daniel, Farnetani, Edda, Fontdevila, Jordi & Pallarès, Maria Dolors. 1993. An electropalatographic study of alveolar and palatal consonants in Catalan and Italian. Language and Speech 36, 213234.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Recasens, Daniel, Dolors Pallarès, Maria & Fontdevila, Jordi. 1998. An electropalatographic and acoustic study of temporal coarticulation for Catalan dark /l/ and German clear /l/. Phonetica 55, 5479.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rice, Keren. 1996. Default variability: The coronal–velar relationship. Natural Language & Linguistic Theory 14, 493543.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rice, Keren. 2007. Markedness in phonology. In de Lacy, Paul (ed.), The Cambridge handbook of phonology, 7998. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rice, Keren. 2008. Review of Paul de Lacy (2006). Markedness: Reduction and preservation in phonology (Cambridge Studies in Linguistics 112). Phonology 25, 361371.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Romero, Joaquín. 1996. Articulatory blending of lingual gestures. Journal of Phonetics 24, 99111.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rubach, Jerzy. 2003. Polish palatalization in Derivational Optimality Theory. Lingua 113, 197237.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rubach, Jerzy. 2004. Derivation in Optimality Theory: A reply to Burzio. Linguistic Inquiry 35, 656670.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rubach, Jerzy. 2008. Palatal nasal decomposition in Slovene, Upper Sorbian and Polish. Journal of Linguistics 44, 169204.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scobbie, James M. & Pouplier, Marianne. 2010. The role of syllable structure in external sandhi: An EPG study of vocalisation and retraction in word-final English /l/. Journal of Phonetics 38, 240259.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scobbie, James M., Wood, Sara E. & Wrench, Alan A.. 2004. Advances in EPG for treatment and research: An illustrative case study. Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics 18, 373389.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Scobbie, James M. & Wrench, Alan A.. 2003. An articulatory investigation of word final /l/ and /l/-sandhi in three dialects of English. Presented at 15th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences, Barcelona.Google Scholar
Simonsen, Hanne Gram, Moen, Inger & Cowen, Steve. 2008. Norwegian retroflex stops in a cross linguistic perspective. Journal of Phonetics 36, 385405.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Spaelti, Phillip. 1997. Dimensions of variation in multi-pattern reduplication. Ph.D. dissertation, University of California, Santa Cruz.Google Scholar
Terrell, Tracy D. 1975. La nasal implosiva y final en el español de Cuba. Anuario de Letras 13, 257271.Google Scholar
Trigo, Rosario L. 1988. On the phonological derivation and behavior of nasal glides. Ph.D. dissertation, MIT.Google Scholar
Wrench, Alan A. 2003–2008. Articulate Assistant Advanced. Computer program.Google Scholar
Xu, Yi. 2010. In defense of lab speech. Journal of Phonetics 38, 329336.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zsiga, Elizabeth C. 1994. An acoustic and electropalatographic study of lexical and postlexical palatalization in American English. In Connell, Bruce & Arvaniti, Amalia (eds.), Phonology and phonetic evidence: Papers in Laboratory Phonology IV, 282302. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar