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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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Journal ArticleDOI

The phonetic motivation for phonological stop assibilation

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the motivation for phonological stop assibilations, e.g. /t/ is realized as [ts], [s] or [t∫] before /i/, from the phonetic perspective.
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Automatic phonetic transcription of large speech corpora

TL;DR: This study investigated whether existing automatic transcription procedures and combinations of such procedures can offer a quick and cheap alternative for the generation of phonetic transcriptions like the manually verified transcriptions delivered with large speech corpora.
Journal ArticleDOI

Modeling the control of phonological encoding in bilingual speakers

TL;DR: This article showed that the activation of phonological representations is not restricted to the target language and that the phonological representation of languages are not separate, and proposed a view of bilingual control in which condition-action rules determine what is done with the activated phonological information depending on a target language.
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Postlexical rules and the status of privative features

TL;DR: This paper showed that place features are privative, and converging evidence from several authors (Mester & Ito 1989, Cho 1990, Lombardi 1991, 1995a) that [voice] is privative also.
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.