Stress domain effects in French phonology and phonological development

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2010

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info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/doi/10.1075/cilt.313.10ros

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Yvan Rose et al., « Stress domain effects in French phonology and phonological development », HAL-SHS : linguistique, ID : 10.1075/cilt.313.10ros


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In this paper, we discuss two distinct data sets. The first comes from the allophonic process of closed-syllable laxing in Québec French, which targets final (stressed) vowels even though these vowels should in theory be syllabified in open syllables in lexical representations (e.g. lune [ˈlʏ.n(ə)]; *[ˈly.n(ə)]). The second is found in the forms produced by a first language learner of European French, who displays an asymmetry in her production of CVC versus CVCV target (adult) forms. The former displays full preservation (with concomitant manner harmony) of both consonants (e.g. passe → [ˈpat]). The latter undergoes deletion of the initial syllable if the consonants are not manner-harmonic in the input (e.g. appétit → [piˈti] versus tennis → [ˈni]). We argue that both patterns can be explained in an approach that draws a formal distinction between phonological representation and phonetic implementation.

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