Stanton (2018) – Gurindji nasal cluster dissimilation as trigger deletion

Gurindji nasal cluster dissimilation as trigger deletion
Juliet Stanton
direct link: http://ling.auf.net/lingbuzz/004263
October 2018
Processes of unbounded spreading are often claimed to be myopic (e.g. Wilson 2003; McCarthy 2009): the ability of some feature [F] to spread from some segment z to some segment y does not depend on its ability to spread from y to x. Recent work (e.g. Walker 2010, 2014; Jardine 2016) has however cast doubt on the universality of this claim. This paper contributes to the discussion on (non-)myopia on by suggesting that a kind of non-myopic process, trigger deletion, is attested in Gurindji (Pama-Nyungan, McConvell 1988): when the spreading domain contains a certain kind of blocking segment, the spreading trigger deletes. In order to capture this pattern, as well as the extant typology of non-myopic processes, I argue that any successful analysis of unbounded spreading must allow surface candidates to be globally evaluated.

Format: [ pdf ]
Reference: lingbuzz/004263
(please use that when you cite this article)
Published in: to appear in Journal of Linguistics
keywords: dissimilation, harmony, non-myopia, nasal-stop clusters, phonology