Structural linguistics

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Vorheriger Titel:Methods in structural linguistics
1. Verfasser: Harris, Zellig S. 1909-1992 (VerfasserIn)
Format: Buch
Sprache:English
Veröffentlicht: Chicago [u.a.] Univ. of Chicago Press 1969
Ausgabe:8. impr.
Schriftenreihe:Phoenix Books 52
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Datensatz im Suchindex

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adam_text TABLE OF CONTENTS f 1. Intkoduction 1 2. Methodological Preliminaries 4 2.0. Introductory 4 2.1. The Criterion of Relevance: Distribution 5 2.2. Schedule of Procedures 6 2.3. The Universe of Discourse 9 2.31. Dialect or Style 9 2.32. Utterance or Discourse 11 2.33. Corpus or Sample 12 2.4. Definition of Terms 13 2.5. The Status of Linguistic Elements 16 2.6. Preview of the Phonologic and Morphologie Elements . 20 2.61. Correlations Outside of Descriptive Linguistics . 21 2.62. Relation between Phonologic and Morphologie Ele¬ ments 23 3-11. Phonology 25 3-4. Phonologic Elements 25 3. Segmentation 25 3.0. Introductory 25 3.1. Purpose: Speech Composed of Discrete Parts . ... 25 3.2. Procedure: Segmenting Utterances at Arbitrary Points . 26 3.3. Result: Unique Segments 27 Appendix to 3.2: On the Segmentation of Single Utterances . 27 4. Phonemic Distinctions 29 4.0. Introductory 29 4.1. Purpose: To Establish Linguistic Equivalence ... 29 4.2. Procedure: Grouping Substitutable Segments . .29 4.21. In Repeated Utterances 29 4.22. In Different Utterances 30 4.23. Paired Utterances 32 4.3. Result: Equivalent and Non-equivalent Segments . . 33 4.31. Distinct Utterances and Distinct Elements . . 33 4.4. Length of Segments 35 4.5. Correcting Possible Errors 36 Appendix to 4.1: The Reason for Equating Segments . . 36 Appendix to 4.21: On the Equivalence of Repetitions ... 37 Appendix to 4.22: Matching in Frames 38 viii TABLE OF CONTENTS ix Appendix to 4.23: Interpretation of the Paired Utterance Test 38 Appendix to 4.3: Intermittently Present Distinctions ... 39 Appendix to 4.5: Continued Testing of New Utterances . . 40 5-11. Relations among Phonologic Elements .... 42 5. Unit Length 42 5.0. Introductory 42 5.1. Purpose: Descriptively Equal Segment Lengths ... 42 5.2. Procedure: Joining Dependent Segments 42 5.3. Result: Utterances Divided into Unit Lengths ... 43 Appendix to 5.3: Unit Length and Phoneme Length ... 44 6. Utterance-long Elements 45 6.0. Introductory 45 6.1. Purpose: Utterance-long Equivalent Features ... 45 6.2. Preliminaries to the Procedure: Discovering Partial Simi- larities 46 6.21. In Paired Utterances 46 6.22. In Otherwise Non-equivalent Utterances ... 47 6.3. Procedure: Extracting Segmental Portions of Utterances 49 6.4. Segmental Length of Contours 49 6.5. Contours Which Occur Simultaneously 50 6.6. Result: Suprasegmental Elements Extending over Utter¬ ances 51 Appendix to 6.1. Morphemic Independence of Utterance-long Elements 52 Appendix to 6.3: Formulaic Statement of the Procedure . . 53 Appendix to 6.4: Contours of More than One Utterance Length 55 Appendix to 6.5: Grouping Complementary Contours . . . 56 Appendix to 6.6: Phonemic Status of Contours 56 7. Phonemes 59 7.0. Introductory 59 7.1. Purpose: Fewer and Less Restricted Elements ... 59 7.2. Preliminaries to the Procedure 60 7.21. Stating the Environments of Segments ... 60 7.22. Summing over the Environments 61 7.3. Procedure: Grouping Segments Having. Complementary Distribution 61 7.31. Adjusting Environments in the Course of Phonemi- cization 62 7.4. Criteria for Grouping Segments 62 7.41. Number and Freedom 63 X TABLE OF CONTENTS 7.42. Symmetry in Representation of Sounds . . . . 04 7.421. Identity of Representation among Segments 64 7.422. Identity of Inter-segmental Relation among Phonemes 60 7.423. Relative to Complete Phoneme Stock . 67 7.43. Symmetry of Environment 08 7.5. Result: Classes of Complementary Segments ... 72 Appendix to 7.21: Tabulating the Environments of a Segment 72 Appendix to 7.22: Tabulating Environments by Segments . 73 Appendix to 7.3: Phonetic and Phonemic Distinctions . . 75 Appendix to 7.4: The Criterion of Morphemic Identity . . 70 8. JüNCTURES 79 8.0. Introductory 79 8.1. Purpose: Eliminating Restrietions on Sets of Phonemes . 79 8.2. Procedure: Defining Differences between Phoneme Sets . 79 8.21. Matching Sets of Tentative Phonemes ... 81 8.211. Syllabification Features 82 8.22. Replacing Contours by Junctures 82 8.221. Periodicities of Segmental Features .83 8.222. Partial Dependence of Juncture on Contour 84 8.223. Partial Dependence of Contour on Juncture 84 8.3. Result: Group of Similarly Placed Features ... 85 8.4. More than One Juncture 86 Appendix to 8.2: Junctures as Morphologie Boundaries . 87 9. RErHONEMICIZATION 90 9.0. Introductory 90 9.1. Purpose: Eliminating Exceptional Distributional Limita- tions 90 9.2. Procedure: Dividing the Segment 90 9.21. Special Cases 92 9.3. Result: Dependent Segments as Allophones ... 93 9.4. Sequences of Segments 93 9.5. Reduction of the Phonemic Stock 94 Appendix to 9.2: Considerations of Symmetry 94 Appendix to 9.21: Junctures as a Special Case of Resegmenta- tion 96 Appendix to Chapters 7-9: The Phonemes of Swahili . . 97 10. Phonemic Long Components 125 10.0. Introductory 125 10.1. Purpose: Replacing Distributionally Limited Phonemes 125 10.2. Procedure: Phonemes Occurring Together Share a Com- ponent 126 TABLE OF CONTENTS « 10.3. Properties of Components 128 10.31. Various Lengths in Various Environments . . 128 10.32. Various Definitions over Various Segments . . 129 10.33. Extension of a Component 130 10.4. Complementary Long Components 131 10.5. Reducing Whole Phonemic Stocks into Components . 132 10.6. Result: Components of Various Lengths 133 Appendix to 10.2: Phonemic Status of Long Components . . 135 Appendix to 10.5: Component Analysis of Swahili . . . . 136 Appendix to 10.1—4: Unit-Length Components; Tone Pho- nemes 143 Appendix to 10.1-5: Unit-Length Components of a Whole Phonemic Stock 146 11. Phonological Structure 150 11.1. Purpose: Phonological Constituency of Utterances . . 150 11.2. Procedure: Stating What Combinations Occur . 150 11.21. Not All Combinations Occur 150 11.22. Utterance Formulae 151 11.3. Result: A Representation of Speech 152 Appendix to 11.22: Utterance Diagrams 152 12-19. Morphology 156 12. morphological elements: morphemic segments . . . 156 12.0. Introductory 156 12.1. Purpose: Phoneme Distribution over Longer Stretches . 156 12.2. Procedure: Independent and Patterned Combinations 157 12.21. Free Morphemic Segments 158 12.22. Upper Limit for Number of Morphemic Segments in an LTtterance 158 12.23. Lower Limit for Number of Morphemic Segments in an Utterance 160 12.231. For Free Forms 160 12.232. For Bound Forms 161 12.233. Summary 161 12.3. Phonemic Identification of Morphemic Segments 164 12.31. Contiguous Phonemic Sequences 165 12.32. Non-contiguous Phonemic Sequences . 165 12.321. Staggered Phonemes 165 12.322. Broken Sequences 165 12.323. Repetitive Sequences 165 12.324. Partially Dependent Non-contiguous Se¬ quences 167 12.33. Replacement of Phonemes 167 XÜ TABLE OF CONTENTS 12.331. Among Individual Phonemes . 167 12.332. Among Classes of Phonemes .... 168 12.333. Replacement by Zero 168 12.34. Suprasegmental Elements 169 12.341. Components 169 12.342. Contour Change 169 12.343. Morpheme-Length Contours .... 169 12.344. Utterance Contours 170 12.35. Combinations of the Above 170 12.4. Result: Elements with Stated Distributions over Utter- ances 171 12.41. Morphemic Segments Correlate with Features of Social Situations 172 12.5. Correlations between Morphemes and Phonemes in Each Language 173 12.51. Phonemic Combinations in Morphemes . . . 174 12.52. Intermittently Present Pause 174 12.53. Adjusting Junctures as Morpheme Boundaries . 175 12.54. New Phonemic Junctures 176 Appendix to 12.22: Partial and Seeming Independence . . 177 Appendix to 12.23: The Criterion of Similar Distributions . 179 Appendix to 12.233: Alternatives in Patterning . . . .181 Appendix to 12.323-4: Complex Discontinuous Morphemes . 182 Appendix to 12.3—4: Order as a Morphemic Element . . . 184 Appendix to 12.41: The Criterion of Meaning 186 Appendix to 12.5: Relation between Morphologie and Phono- logic Segmentation 195 13-19. Relations among Morphologic Elements .... 197 13. Morpheme Alternants 197 13.0. Introductory 197 13.1. Purpose: Reducing the Number of Elements . . 197 13.2. Preliminary Operation: Free Variants in Identical En¬ vironments 198 13.3. Procedure: Equating Unique Morphemic Segments . 199 13.31. Phonemically Identical Segments 199 13.32. Phonemically Different Segments 200 13.4. Criteria for Grouping Elements 201 13.41. Matching Environments of Phonemically Identi¬ cal Elements 201 13.42. Phonemically Different Elements 203 13.421. Matching Environments 203 13.422. Simplifying Environmental Differentia- tions 204 TABLE OF CONTENTS xiii 13.43. Choosing among Complementary Elements . . 207 13.5. Relations among the Members of a Morpheme . . . 208 13.51. The Environments of Each Member .... 208 13.511. Phonemically Differentiable .... 208 13.512. Morphemically Differentiable ... 209 13.52. Phonemic Differences among the Members . . 210 13.521. Slight Difference 210 13.522. Partial Identity 211 13.523. No Identity 211 13.53. Similarity between Member and Its Environment 212 13.531. No Similarity 212 13.532. Identity in Phonemic Feature ... 212 13.533. Identity in Phonemes 212 13.6. Result:Classesof Complementary Morphemic Segments 212 Appendix to 13.42: Zero Members of Morphemes .... 213 Appendix to 13.43: Alternative Groupings 215 14. MORPHOPHONEMES 219 14.0. Introductory 219 14.1. Purpose: Identical Constitution for All Alternants of a Morpheme • 219 14.2. Preliminaries to the Procedure: Morphemes Having Identical Alternations among Their Members . . . 219 14.21. Unique Alternations 220 14.22. Alternations Generalizable within Morphemically Defined Limits 220 14.221. Identity of Part of the Alternation . . 220 14.222. Identical Alternation in Phonemically Undifferentiable Morphemes .... 221 14.223. Alternations in Phonemically Differen¬ tiable Morphemes in Phonemically Un¬ differentiable Environments .... 221 14.224. Summary 222 14.23. Alternations within Phonemically Differentiable Morphemes and Environments 222 14.3. Procedure: Interchanging Phonemes among Alternants of One Morpheme 224 14.31. Status of the Morphophonemic Symbols . . . 225 14.32. Several Morphophonemes in One Alternation . 226 14.33. Types of Alternation Represented by Morpho¬ phonemes 227 14.331. Morphophonemic Redefinition of Pho¬ nemic Symbols 227 14.332. New Symbols Required 230 xiv TABLE OF CONTENTS 14.4. Result: Morphophonemes as Classes of Substitutable Phonemes 231 14.5. Reconsideration of the Grouping of Phonological Seg¬ ments 233 14.51. Morphophonemic Criterion for Grouping Seg¬ ments 233 14.52. Phonemicization of Cross-Boundary Alternations 234 14.53. Equivalent Phonemic Spellings 235 14.6. Reconsideration of the Grouping of Morphological Seg¬ ments 236 Appendix to 14.32: Morphophonemic Equivalent for Descrip- tive Order of Alternation 237 Appendix to 14.33: Alternations Not Represented by Morpho¬ phonemes 238 Appendix to 14.331: Maximum Generality for Morphopho¬ nemes 239 Appendix to 14.332: Choice of Marking Morpheme, Environ¬ ment, or Juncture 240 15. Morpheme Classes 243 15.1. Purpose: Fewer Morphologically Distinct Elements . 243 15.2. Preliminaries to the Procedure: Approximation . . . 244 15.3. Procedure: Rough Similarity of Environments . . . 245 15.31. Descriptive Order of Setting Up Classes ... 246 15.32. General Classes for Partial Distributional Iden- tity 248 15.4. Alternative Procedure: Classes of Morphemes-in-Envi- ronments 249 15.41. General Classes for Partial Distributional Iden- tity 251 15.5. Result: Morpheme-Position Classes 251 15.51. Morpheme Index 252 Appendix to 15.2: Culturally Determined Limitations and Productive Morphemes 253 Appendix to 15.3: Identical Distribution within Short Environ¬ ments 255 Appendix to 15.32: Identical Morphemes in Various Classes . 257 Appendix to 15.4: Tabulating Morpheme-Environment Classes 259 Appendix to 15.5: Correlation between Morpheme Classes and Phonemic Features 261 16. Morpheme Sequences 262 16.0. Introductory 262 16.1. Purpose: Fewer and More General Classes .... 262 TABLE OF CONTENTS xv 16.2. Procedure: Substitutable Sequences of Morpheme Classes 263 16.21. Non-repeatable Substitutions 265 16.22. Analysis of the Complete Corpus 268 16.3. Sequence Substitution as a Morphologie Tool . . . 268 16.31. Exceptionally Limited Morphemes .... 268 16.32. Morphemic Resegmentation 269 16.33. Indicating Differences among Utterances . . 271 16.4. Result: Classes of Substitutable Morpheme Sequences . 273 16.5. Relation of Class to Sequences Containing It . . . 275 16.51. Resultant Class Differing from Sequence Classes 275 16.52. Resultant Class Identical with One of the Se¬ quence Classes 276 16.53. All Sequences Containing a Class 276 16.54. Immediate Constituents 278 Appendix to 16.1: Why Begin with Morpheme Classes? . . 280 Appendix to 16.2: Morphemic Contours in the Substitutions . 281 Appendix to 16.21: Alternative Methods for Non-repeatable Substitutions 283 Appendix to 16.22: Morpheme-Sequence Substitutions for Mo- roccan Arabic 285 Appendix to 16.31: Sequence Analysis of Words Containing wh- and Ih- 289 Appendix to 16.4: From Classes of Morphemes to Classes of Positions 295 17. Morphemic Long Components 299 17.0. Introductory 299 17.1. Purpose: Relations among Morpheme Classes . . . 299 17.2. Preliminaries to the Procedure: Disregarding the Rest of the Utterance 300 17.3. Procedure: Morphemes Occurring Together Share a Component 301 17.31. Classes Which Accompany Each Other .301 17.32. Restrictions among Sub-classes 303 17.33. Sub-classes Representable by Several Compo¬ nents 306 17.4. Result: Components Indicating Patterned Concurrences of Morphemes 309 17.5. Restrictions Not Represented by Components . . .311 Appendixto 17.32: Sub-classes Consistingof Single Morphemes 312 Appendix to 17.33: Morphemic Components for Intersecting Limitations 314 xvi TABLE OF CONTENTS 18. Constrüctions 325 18.0. Introductory 325 18.1. Purpose: Recurrent Arrangements of Morpheme Classes 325 18.2. Procedure: Substitution in Short Environments . . . 325 18.21. Features of Construction 328 18.22. Successively Enclosing Constrüctions . . . 329 18.3. Result: Constrüctions Included in the Next Larger Con¬ strüctions 332 18.4. Reconsideration of Previous Results 333 Appendix to 18.2: Zero Segments and Voided Elements 334 1. Zero Segments Represented by Elements 334 2. Voided Elements: Non-zero Segments Represented by Absence of Element 337 3. Relation between Zero Segments and Voided Elements . 340 Appendix to 18.4: Correlation with Previous Results . . . 342 1. With Phonemic Features 342 2. With Boundaries 343 3. With Contours 345 4. With Morpheme Classes 346 5. With Meaning 347 19. Morphological Structure 349 19.1. Purpose: Stating What Utterances Occur in the Corpus 349 19.2. Procedure: Sequences of Resultants or Constrüctions . 349 19.3. The Selective Substitution Diagram 350 19.31. Different Conditions for Different Substitutions . 350 19.4. Result: Sentence Types 351 Appendix to 19.31: Detailed Diagrams 352 20. Survey 361 20.1. Summary of the Results 361 20.11. Phonology 361 20.12. Morphology 362 20.13. General 364 20.2. Survey of the Operations 365 20.21. To State Regularities or To Synthesize Utter¬ ances? 365 20.22. Operations of Analysis 366 20.3. Description of the Language Structure 372 20.4. Correlations Outside of Descriptive Linguistics . . 373 Appendix to 20.3: A Grammar of Lists 376 Index 379
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spellingShingle Harris, Zellig S. 1909-1992
Structural linguistics
Strukturelle Linguistik (DE-588)4135392-4 gnd
subject_GND (DE-588)4135392-4
title Structural linguistics
title_alt Methods in structural linguistics
title_auth Structural linguistics
title_exact_search Structural linguistics
title_full Structural linguistics by Zellig S. Harris
title_fullStr Structural linguistics by Zellig S. Harris
title_full_unstemmed Structural linguistics by Zellig S. Harris
title_old Methods in structural linguistics
title_short Structural linguistics
title_sort structural linguistics
topic Strukturelle Linguistik (DE-588)4135392-4 gnd
topic_facet Strukturelle Linguistik
url http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=001959755&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA
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