: Jeroen van de Weijer, Kensuke Nanjo, Tetsuo Nishihara
: Voicing in Japanese
: De Gruyter Mouton
: 9783110197686
: Studies in Generative Grammar [SGG]ISSN
: 1
: CHF 178.30
:
: Allgemeine und Vergleichende Sprachwissenschaft
: English
: 322
: Wasserzeichen/DRM
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: PDF

This book presents a number of studies which focus on the [voice] grammar of Japanese, paying particular attention to historical background, dialectal diversity, phonetic experiment, and phonological analysis. Both voicing processes in consonants (such as Sequential Voicing, or Rendaku) and vowels (such as vowel devoicing) are examined.

A number of new analyses are presented, focusing on well-known data that have been controversial in phonological debate in the past, but also presenting new (or rediscovered) data, partly through the work of Japanese scholars that hitherto went mostly unnoticed, partly through new database research, and partly through phonetic experiment.

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Jeroen van de Weijeris Lecturer in linguistics at Leiden University, The Netherlands. He specialises in phonological theory, especially with regard to segmental representation and with a keen interest in laryngeal features.

Kensuke Nanjois Associate Professor of Phonetics at St. Andrew’s University, Osaka, Japan. His interests include English and Japanese phonetics and phonology, lexicography, accents of English, and the acquisition of English by Japanese learners.

Tetsuo Nishiharais Lecturer of English at the Miyagi University of Education, Sendai, Japan with a particular interest in English and Japanese phonology, especially with regard to prosodic phonology and phonology-morphology interaction.

Frontmatter1
Contents7
Voicing in Japanese9
Rendaku: Its domain and linguistic conditions13
Sequential voicing, postnasal voicing, and Lyman’s Law revisited33
Sei-daku: diachronic developments in the writing system55
The representation of laryngeal-source contrasts in Japanese79
Rendaku in inflected words97
Ranking paradoxes in consonant voicing in Japanese113
The implicational distribution of prenasalized stops in Japanese131
The correlation between accentuation and Rendaku in Japanese surnames: a morphological account165
A survey of Rendaku in loanwords185
Recognizing Japanese numeral-classifier combinations199
Corpus-based analysis of vowel devoicing in spontaneous Japanese: an interim report213
Syllable structure and its acoustic effects on vowels in devoicing environments237
The effect of speech rate on devoiced accented vowels in Osaka Japanese255
Where voicing and accent meet: their function, interaction, and opacity problems in phonological prominence269
Backmatter287