Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Preface
- Structural and Cognitive Poetics: a Comparison
- A Note on Translation and Relevance
- On the Syntactic and Non-Syntactic Aspects of the Grammar of Anaphors and Pronouns
- How Many Grammatical Cases Were There in Proto-Germanic? Interpreting the Old English Evidence
- Two Syntactic Systems in One Mind: the Influence of Processing L2 Grammar on Syntactic Processing in L1
- Deductive or Inductive? A Brief Analysis of Two Types of Grammar Instruction
- Does Intertextuality Have to Be Textual?
- On Note-Taking in Consecutive Interpreting
- A Users' Guide to CVCV Phonology
- About the Authors
A Users' Guide to CVCV Phonology
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 September 2014
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Preface
- Structural and Cognitive Poetics: a Comparison
- A Note on Translation and Relevance
- On the Syntactic and Non-Syntactic Aspects of the Grammar of Anaphors and Pronouns
- How Many Grammatical Cases Were There in Proto-Germanic? Interpreting the Old English Evidence
- Two Syntactic Systems in One Mind: the Influence of Processing L2 Grammar on Syntactic Processing in L1
- Deductive or Inductive? A Brief Analysis of Two Types of Grammar Instruction
- Does Intertextuality Have to Be Textual?
- On Note-Taking in Consecutive Interpreting
- A Users' Guide to CVCV Phonology
- About the Authors
Summary
Introduction
The late 1980s and early 1990s brought a substantial shift in the views on the role of structures and derivations in phonology. The 1985 and 1990 papers by Kaye, Lowenstamm and Vergnaud postulated a static view that underlined the role of the lexicon and the structural relations between the segments of phonological representations. The aim of this paper is to present the main tenets of the continuation of the approach proposed in the above-mentioned works: CVCV Phonology presented in Scheer (1998, 2004). The paper is structured as follows: section 2 is devoted to the introduction of the syllabic constituent structure in CVCV. Section 3 is a presentation of the Empty Category Principle (ECP), which constitutes the very essence of the approach in question. The aim of section 4 is to present a brief typology of phonological processes within CVCV, with emphasis on their motivation. Section 5 gives a short summary of the facts presented in this paper.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Young Linguists in DialogueThe First Conference, pp. 87 - 96Publisher: Jagiellonian University PressPrint publication year: 2009