Opacidade contra-alimentadora no PE: análise por Marcação Comparativa

Gisela Collinschonn

Abstract


Recent generative phonology is witnessing a debate between severalproposals concerning the solution of the opacity problem. “Opacity”refers to generalizations that are not superficially detectable – whichare explained in derivational phonology by applying ordered applicationof rules. In Optimality Theory, the opacity issue attracts special interest,since this theory abandons rules altogether, such as intermediaterepresentations and derivational stages between input and output. Asfor the responses to the opacity issue, some propose a return in OTto derivational levels, similar to the components of Lexical Phonology(KIPARSKY, 2000; RUBACH, 2000; ITÔ; MESTER, 2003). Thesesolutions give up full parallelism, since evaluation of well-formedness isrealized in a staged form. Other solutions maintain parallelism and appealto other resources of the theory to account for the issue, like conjoinedconstraints (KIRCHNER, 1996; McCARTHY, 1999), specializationsof correspondence constraints (Sympathy Theory) or markednessconstraints (Comparative Markedness Theory). Some of these alternativesolutions are, in some way, derivational or almost derivational(MCARTHY, 2006, p.5), because they appeal to an intermediate formto influence the output. In this paper, we discuss two phenomenafrom European Portuguese in which interaction is opaque. The analysisis restricted to counter-feeding opacity and focalizes an accountaccording to Comparative Markedness (McCARTHY, 2002a). Additionally,we discuss some of the implications of this account, relative to theRichness of the Base postulate, and some predictions concerningthe possibility of interaction with other processes.

Keywords


Optimality Theory; Opacity; Comparative Markedness

References


ABAURRE, M. B.; PAGOTTO, E. G. Palatalização das oclusivas dentais no português do Brasil. In: ABAURRE, M.B.M.; RODRIGUES, A.C.S. (Ed.). Gramática do português falado VIII. Campinas: Editora da UNICAMP. 2002. p. 557-602.

BISOL, L. Palatalization and its variable restriction. In: MATTOS; BORTONI (Ed.). International Journal of the Sociology of Language, v. 89, p.107-124, 1991.

D’ANDRADE, E. Temas de Fonologia. Lisboa: Colibri, 1994.

ITÔ, J.; MESTER, A. Lexical and Postlexical Phonology in Optimality Theory: Evidence from Japanese. Manuscrito. 2003. Disponível em: http://roa.rutgers.edu. Acesso em: 8 nov. 2006.

LEE, S.-H. Formas de entrada e otimização do léxico. Ms., 2002.

KAGER, R. Optimality Theory. Cambridge: CUP, 1999.

KIPARSKY, P. Linguistic universals and linguistic change. In: BACH, E.; HARMS, R. Universals in linguistic theory. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1968.

KIPARSKY, P. Historical Linguistics. In: DINGWALL (Ed.). A Survey of Linguistic Science. University of Maryland Press, 1971. p.577-642.

KIPARSKY, P. Opacity and cyclicity. The Linguistic Review, n. 17, p. 351-365, 2000.

KIRCHNER, R. Synchronic chain shifts in Optimality Theory. Linguistic Inquiry, v. 27, p. 341-349, 1996.

MATEUS, M. H. et alii. Fonética, fonologia e morfologia do português. Lisboa: Universidade Aberta, 1990.

MATEUS, M.; D’ANDRADE, E. The phonology of Portuguese. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000.

MCCARTHY, J. Sympathy and phonological opacity. Phonology, v.16, p.331-399, 1999.

McCARTHY, J. Comparative Markedness. Amherst: University of Massachusetts, 2002a. Disponível em: http://roa.rutgers.edu.

McCARTHY, J. A thematic Guide to Optimality Theory. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002b.

McCARTHY, J. 2006a GEN, EVAL, and Phonological Opacity. Indiana University Bloomington. Phonology Fest 2006. Disponível em: http://www.indiana.edu/~phono/page1/McCarthyHO.pdf. Acesso em: 8 nov. 2006.

McCARTHY, J. (2006b) Handout: Inventories and distribution in OT. Linguistics 603. Amherst: University of Massachusetts. Disponível em: http://people.umass.edu/jjmccart/ling603/. Acesso em: 8 nov. 2006.

RUBACH, J. Glide and glottal stop insertion in Slavic Languages: a DOT Analysis. Linguistic Inquiry, v.31, n.2, p. 271-317, 2000.

VIEIRA, M. J. B. As vogais médias postônicas: uma análise variacionista. In: BISOL, L; BRESCANCINI, C. (Org.). Fonologia e Variação: Recortes do português brasileiro. Porto Alegre: EDIPUCRS, 2002. p.127-159.

VIGÁRIO, M. The Prosodic Word in European Portuguese, Berlin & New York: Mouton de Gruyter, Interface Explorations 6, 2003. 440 p.




DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.17851/2237-2083.15.2.167-186

Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.
';



Copyright (c)



e - ISSN 2237-2083 

License

Licensed through  Creative Commons Atribuição 4.0 Internacional