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The Phonology of Dutch

Geert Booij
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TLDR
The sounds of Dutch: Phonetic characterization and phonological representation 3. The prosodic structure of words 4. Word phonology 5. Word stress 6. Connected speech I: word phonology 7. Sentence phonology 8. Cliticization 9. Orthography
Abstract
1. Introduction 2. The sounds of Dutch: Phonetic characterization and phonological representation 3. The prosodic structure of words 4. Word phonology 5. Word stress 6. Connected speech I: Word phonology 7. Connected speech II: Sentence phonology 8. Connected speech III: Cliticization 9. Orthography

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Variation in reduction strategies of Dutch word-initial consonant clusters (2003)

TL;DR: This article investigated between-individual and within-individual variation in consonant cluster reduction strategies (C1C2 is realized as C1 or C2) among young children, and found that within-child variation is very limited, whereas between child variation occurs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Towards a typology of stop assibilation

Tracy Alan Hall, +1 more
- 01 Nov 2006 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, it is argued that assibilations are to be captured in the Optimality Theoretic framework by ranking markedness constraints grounded in perception that penalize sequences like [ti] ahead of a faithfulness constraint that militates against the change from /t / to some sibilant sound.
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Derived environment blocking effects in optimality theory

TL;DR: It will be argued below that Derived Environment Blocking effects can be captured in Optimality Theory in terms of a general ranking involving Faithfulness and Markedness constraints and that individual languages invoke a specific instantiation of this ranking.
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Informal speech processes can be categorical in nature, even if they affect many different words

TL;DR: Evidence is provided that reduction phenomena which affect many words in informal conversations may also result from categorical reduction processes, which are supported by the distributions of the segments' durations.
References
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Book

The Sound Pattern of English

Noam Chomsky, +1 more
TL;DR: Since this classic work in phonology was published in 1968, there has been no other book that gives as broad a view of the subject, combining generally applicable theoretical contributions with analysis of the details of a single language.
Book

Autosegmental and Metrical Phonology

TL;DR: Autosegmental representation the skeletal tier the syllable metrical phonology lexical phonology further issues as discussed by the authors, which is not the case in this paper, are discussed.
Book

A metrical theory of stress rules

Bruce Hayes
TL;DR: Thesis (PhD) as mentioned in this paper, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept of Linguistics and Philosophy, 1980, Boston, Massachusetts, USA, United States, USA.
Dissertation

The representation of features and relations in non-linear phonology

TL;DR: Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Linguistics and Philosophy, 1986.