Difference between revisions of "Maximal Onset Principle"
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Haspelmath (talk | contribs) (New page: In phonology, the '''Maximal Onset Principle''' is a principle determining underlying syllable division. It states that intervocalic consonants are maximally assigned to the onsets of ...) |
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− | In phonology, the '''Maximal Onset Principle''' is a principle determining underlying [[syllable division]]. It states that intervocalic consonants are maximally assigned to the onsets of syllables in conformity with universal and language-specific conditions (see also [[sonority hierarchy]]). | + | In phonology, the '''Maximal Onset Principle''' is a principle determining underlying [[syllable division]]. It states that intervocalic [[consonants]] are maximally assigned to the onsets of syllables in conformity with universal and language-specific conditions (see also [[sonority hierarchy]]). |
===Example=== | ===Example=== | ||
− | The English word ''diploma'' can be divided in several ways: dip.lo.ma vs. di.plo.ma. However, the only division that is in conformity with the maximal onset principle is di.plo.ma. | + | The English word ''diploma'' can be divided in several ways: ''dip.lo.ma'' vs. ''di.plo.ma''. However, the only division that is in conformity with the maximal onset principle is ''di.plo.ma.'' |
===Link=== | ===Link=== | ||
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===References=== | ===References=== | ||
− | *Kahn, | + | * Kahn, Daniel (1976) Syllable-based generalizations in English phonology. Doctoral dissertation, MIT. |
− | *Selkirk, E.O. ( | + | * Selkirk, E.O. 1981. ''English Compounding and the Theory of Word-structure,'' in: M. Moortgat, H. Van der Hulst & T. Hoestra (eds.) The Scope of Lexical Rules, Foris, Dordrecht. |
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{{dc}} | {{dc}} | ||
[[Category:Phonetics and phonology]] | [[Category:Phonetics and phonology]] |
Latest revision as of 14:42, 1 February 2010
In phonology, the Maximal Onset Principle is a principle determining underlying syllable division. It states that intervocalic consonants are maximally assigned to the onsets of syllables in conformity with universal and language-specific conditions (see also sonority hierarchy).
Example
The English word diploma can be divided in several ways: dip.lo.ma vs. di.plo.ma. However, the only division that is in conformity with the maximal onset principle is di.plo.ma.
Link
Utrecht Lexicon of Linguistics
References
- Kahn, Daniel (1976) Syllable-based generalizations in English phonology. Doctoral dissertation, MIT.
- Selkirk, E.O. 1981. English Compounding and the Theory of Word-structure, in: M. Moortgat, H. Van der Hulst & T. Hoestra (eds.) The Scope of Lexical Rules, Foris, Dordrecht.