USC Advanced Undergraduate Phonology ✳︎ Fall 2019 ✳︎ Smith
Assignment 4: OT analysis of Spanish
IPA | gloss |
---|---|
bastante | ‘plenty’ |
brinkar | ‘to jump’ |
berðe | ‘green’ |
futbol | ‘soccer’ |
sombra | ‘shade’ |
uβa | ‘grape’ |
karβon | ‘coal’ |
suβo | ‘I climb’ |
uβo | ‘there was’ |
saβino | ‘cypress’ |
kaβe | ‘it fits’ |
kluβ | ‘club’ |
deðo | ‘finger/toe’ |
droɣas | ‘drugs’ |
komuniðað | ‘community’ |
seða | ‘silk’ |
ganaðo | ‘cattle’ |
usteð | ‘you (sg. polite)’ |
gastos | ‘expenses’ |
gonsales | a surname |
alɣo | ‘something’ |
jaɣa | ‘sore, boil’ |
aɣrio | ‘sour’ |
gustar | ‘to please’ |
xweɣo | ‘game’ |
alβondiɣas | ‘meatballs’ |
Descriptive generalizations about the distribution of the voiced stops [b, d, g] and their continuant counterparts [β, ð, ɣ].
An OT analysis.
Propose a constraint set to account for the data.
Establish crucial rankings through pairwise winner/loser comparisons.
Support your analysis with (at least) summary tableaux for [kaβe] and for [gustar].
Make sure your analysis is consistent with Richness of the Base, and shows that reasonable Spanish-like outputs obtain regardless of whether URs contain voiced stops or continuants (even if you argue that Spanish URs only contain one or the other).
Make sure that you use both comparative tableaux and violation tableaux as appropriate.
Discussion of any feasible alternative OT analyses.