Event
Mao-Hsu Chen will be defending his dissertation:
Title: Tone Sandhi Phenomena in Taiwan Southern Min
Supervisor: Mark Liberman
Committee: Jianjing Kuang, David Embick
Time: Thursday, April 26th, 2:00 pm
Location:Linguistics Seminar Room(Room 326)
_________________
Abstract:
This dissertation investigates various aspects of the tone
sandhi phenomena in Taiwan Southern Min. Previous studies
have reported complete tonal neutralization between the two
sandhi 33 variants derived respectively from citation 55 and
24 variants, leading to the claim that tone sandhi in this
language is categorical. The fact that tone sandhi in TSM is
assumed to possess a mixture of properties of lexical and
postlexical rules gives rise to the debate over the status
of this phonological rule.
The findings of the dissertation shows incomplete
neutralization between the two sandhi 33 variants with an
indication of an ongoing sound change towards a near- or
complete tonal merger, possibly led by female speakers. In
addition, citation form is proposed to be more underlyingly
represented on account of the fact that subjects, especially
old speakers, have stronger association with citation
variants than with sandhi variants in the priming
experiment. The spontaneous corpus study suggests that the
Tone Circle is merely a phonological idealization in light
of the systematic subphonemic difference in f0 between
citation X and sandhi X that are supposed to correspond even
with some control of conceivable confounding factors. By
comparing direct- and indirect-reference models, I argue
that tone sandhi in TSM should be analyzed as a head-left
Concatenation rule within a DM-based theoretical framework.