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Multi-Conditioned Sound Change and the Impact of Morphology on Phonology
Two ill-defined and controversial sound developments of late Old Spanish, namely the asymmetric diphthongizations ié > i and ué > e, become better understandable if one selects as starting points a set of morphological rather than phonological conditions. Both verbal inflection and suffixal de...
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Published in: | Language (Baltimore) 1976-12, Vol.52 (4), p.757-778 |
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container_title | Language (Baltimore) |
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creator | Malkiel, Yakov |
description | Two ill-defined and controversial sound developments of late Old Spanish, namely the asymmetric diphthongizations ié > i and ué > e, become better understandable if one selects as starting points a set of morphological rather than phonological conditions. Both verbal inflection and suffixal derivation can be invoked, including the rivalry of certain characteristic groups of preterits (-iemos, -ieste(s) beside -imos, -iste(s) etc.) and the competition of pairs or clusters of functionally more or less related suffixes: -ero beside -uero, -eño alongside -ueño-in addition to the pressure exerted, in the ranks of hypocoristics, by the close-knit series -ico, -ito and -in(o) on isolated -iello. |
doi_str_mv | 10.2307/413294 |
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issn | 0097-8507 1535-0665 |
language | eng |
recordid | cdi_proquest_journals_1290670197 |
source | JSTOR |
subjects | Consonants Diphthongs Historical linguistics Lexical stress Nouns Rivalry Sound change Verbs Words |
title | Multi-Conditioned Sound Change and the Impact of Morphology on Phonology |
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