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A Diachronically-Motivated Segmental Phonology of Mandarin Chinese

by Wen-Chao Li (Author)
©1999 Monographs XIV, 270 Pages

Summary

Breaking with the Saussurean tradition of separating the synchronic from the diachronic, this book presents an analysis of Mandarin Chinese segmental phonology in which rules and constraints are modeled after historical sound change. The analysis provides original solutions to major phonological problems, most notably, the relationship between sibilant and velar initials, the organization of vowel space and relations between vowel phonemes, the nature of the «zero onset», and the identity and effect of the diminutive suffix. Changes in the pronunciation of Standard Chinese are accounted for using recent conceptions of feature geometry; research into language contact on the Sino-Turkic frontier leads to the discovery of Altaic vowel harmony in Mandarin, an original hypothesis that drastically simplifies Mandarin morphophonology and introduces a new dimension to the vowel system of Northern Chinese.

Details

Pages
XIV, 270
Year
1999
ISBN (Hardcover)
9780820442938
Language
English
Keywords
Mandarin phonology Vowel space Pronunciation Sibilant Diminutive suffix
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt/M., Wien, 1999. XIV, 270 pp.

Biographical notes

Wen-Chao Li (Author)

The Author: Wen-Chao Li was born in 1968 and spent his childhood in Hawaii. He received his doctorate from Oxford University in 1997. He has worked as a producer for the British Broadcasting Corporation and has taught at the University of Minnesota. Dr. Li has published original and translated poetry in British journals and is currently Assistant Professor of Linguistics at the National Taiwan Normal University in Taipei.

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Title: A Diachronically-Motivated Segmental Phonology of Mandarin Chinese