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9780199229314

The Phonology of Icelandic and Faroese

by Arnason, Kristjan
  • ISBN13:

    9780199229314

  • ISBN10:

    0199229317

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2011-09-15
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press

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Summary

This book presents a comprehensive, contrastive account of the phonological structures and characteristics of Icelandic and Faroese. It is written for Nordic linguists and theoretical phonologists interested in what the languages reveal about phonological structure and phonological change and the relation between morphology, phonology, and phonetics. The book is divided into five parts. In the first Professor Arnason provides the theoretical and historical context of his investigation. Icelandic and Faroese originate from the West-Scandinavian or Norse spoken in Norway, Iceland and part of the Scottish Isles at the end of the Viking Age. The modern spoken languages are barely intelligible to each other and, despite many common phonological characteristics, exhibit differences that raise questions about their historical and structural relation and about phonological change more generally. Separate parts are devoted to synchronic analysis of the sounds of the languages, their phonological oppositions, syllabic structure and phonotactics, lexical morphophonemics, rhythmic structure, intonation and postlexical variation. The book draws on the author's and others' published work and presents the results of original research in Faroese and Icelandic phonology.

Author Biography


Kristjan Arnason is the author of several major works on Icelandic language, including a two-volume work on Icelandic linguistics, published in 1980 and a handbook of Icelandic phonology, published in 2005. His publications in English include Quantity in Historical Phonology: Icelandic and Related Cases (CUP 1980), The Rhythm of Drottkvaett and other Old Icelandic Metres (University of Iceland 1991), as well as articles in journals such as Journal of Linguistics, Nordic Journal Linguistics, Journal of Germanic Linguistics and Lingua.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgementsp. xiii
Abbreviationsp. xv
The historical and theoretical setting
The Two Languages and their Historical Relationp. 3
The genetic relation: 'Proto-West Nordic'p. 3
West Nordic obstruentsp. 4
West Nordic sonorantsp. 6
West Nordic vowelsp. 7
Diphthongs and semivowelsp. 8
Prosodic structurep. 8
The Historical Developmentp. 11
Quantity and prosodic structurep. 12
Overlong (superheavy) syllables and their developmentp. 15
The components of the quantity shiftp. 17
Quality changes in the Icelandic vowel systemp. 20
Faroese vowel developmentsp. 23
The short diphthongsp. 25
The West Nordic consonant shiftp. 26
New postvocalic stopsp. 28
The skerping and hiatusp. 31
Systemic arrangements and types of syllablesp. 33
Theoretical Preliminaries to the Synchronic Analysisp. 35
Phonological levels of representationp. 35
Alphabets for phonological representationp. 39
Segments and distinctionsp. 40
Phonological primesp. 41
Analysing diphthongizationp. 43
The representation of time and precedencep. 47
Saturation and fission in West Nordic diphthongsp. 48
The modern diphthongal systemsp. 51
The modern sound systems
The Icelandic Vowel Colours and Diphthongsp. 57
The Icelandic vowel systemp. 57
The monophthongal unitsp. 57
The phonetic description of the vowel soundsp. 60
Analysing the monophthongal coloursp. 61
The diphthongs as branching phonemic unitsp. 62
Diphthongs and hiatusp. 65
The vowels of non-initial syllablesp. 66
Faroese Vowels and Diphthongsp. 68
An overviewp. 68
The inventory of vowelsp. 68
The 'long' and 'short' systemsp. 70
The phonetic and phonological analysis of the Faroese monophthongs and diphthongsp. 74
The vowel qualitiesp. 74
Analysing the Faroese diphthongsp. 76
More on dialect variation and vowel systemsp. 79
Hiatus phenomena in Faroesep. 80
Intervocalic glidesp. 80
Raising in hiatusp. 82
One or two syllablesp. 85
The unstressed vowels of Faroesep. 86
The vowel qualitiesp. 86
The syllable typesp. 88
Dialects and morphology in unstressed vowel mergerp. 90
The postlexical reduction and syncopep. 94
Coping with the variation: a folk-linguistic anecdote from Tórshavnp. 96
Icelandic Consonantsp. 98
An overviewp. 98
The stopsp. 99
Places of articulationp. 99
On palatals and velarsp. 100
The fortis-lenis oppositionp. 103
The fricativesp. 106
The sonorantsp. 109
Summary: the classes of consonants and their element analysisp. 111
Faroese Consonant Segmentsp. 114
An overviewp. 114
The fortis and lenis plosivesp. 118
The phonological correlationp. 118
'Hard' and 'soft' dialects in Faroesep. 118
The fricativesp. 122
Initial fricativesp. 122
Word-internal fricatives and glidesp. 123
Sonorantsp. 124
The element analysis of the Faroese systemp. 124
Systemic relations and syllabic structure
Systemic Relations in Vowelsp. 129
Trends towards a diasystem in Icelandicp. 129
The 'new' diphthongsp. 129
A context-free merger in the 'long' systemp. 132
The interplay of merger and diphthongizationp. 133
The 'long/open' and 'short/closed' correspondencep. 134
The Faroese vowel systemsp. 135
The polysystemic structurep. 135
On prominencep. 138
The element analysis of reduction: limits on information in restricted environmentsp. 140
Conclusion: systemic relations in vowel systemsp. 142
Syllable Structure and Phonotacticsp. 144
Syllable structure in Icelandicp. 144
Motivating the syllablep. 144
The subsyllabic constituentsp. 145
The Icelandic length rulep. 148
Half length and overlengthp. 149
Emphatic stress on non-initial syllablesp. 151
Faroese syllablesp. 152
The length rule in Faroesep. 152
The template for full syllables in Faroesep. 155
Half length and overlength in Faroesep. 156
Full syllables and restricted syllables in the phonological hierarchyp. 157
The consonantal phonotactics of Icelandicp. 160
Initial onsets in Icelandicp. 161
Consonants in the Icelandic codap. 165
Internal onsets in Icelandicp. 167
More complicated interludes in Icelandicp. 170
The consonantal phonotactics of Faroesep. 173
Monosegmental onsetsp. 173
Initial clusters in Faroesep. 175
Faroese coda consonantsp. 176
Internal onsets in Faroesep. 178
Gemination of glides and consonantsp. 180
Conclusion: remarks on systemic structure and prominencep. 182
Length and Quantity in Accentuation and Phonotacticsp. 185
Length and quantity in Icelandicp. 186
Some distinctionsp. 186
Segmental length and syllabic structurep. 189
Length in postlexical accentuationp. 191
Representing length and quantityp. 195
Excursus: A brief comparison with Finland Swedishp. 202
The length rule on lexical and phonological levels in Icelandicp. 203
Length and syllabificationp. 203
Two versions of the rulep. 205
The prosodic character of Faroese vowelsp. 208
Vowel shortness and the scale of prominencep. 210
Segments and syllables on phonological levels
Aspiration in Syllabic and Segmental Structurep. 215
Aspiration and the character of the fortis-lenis oppositionp. 216
Representing the oppositionp. 216
Phonotactic or phonetic neutralization of the fortis-lenis opposition?p. 217
Preaspiration in Icelandicp. 219
The phonetic characterp. 219
The distribution of preaspiration in Icelandicp. 220
Phonological analysisp. 222
Related phenomenap. 225
Preaspiration in Faroesep. 228
Representing the differencep. 230
Preaspiration in morphophonemicsp. 231
Allomorphy, Morphophonemics, and Phonological Levelsp. 234
Introductionp. 234
Lexical and postlexical relations in paradigmsp. 235
Vocalic patterns in Icelandicp. 238
The ablaut seriesp. 238
I-umlautp. 239
U-umlaut and breakingp. 243
Morphology and phonotactics in vocalic alternationp. 246
Faroese vowel morphophonemicsp. 247
Ablautp. 247
Umlautp. 248
Consonantal patterns in Icelandic morphophonemicsp. 250
Consonantal patterns in Faroesep. 252
Vowel deletion in paradigmsp. 253
Intersyllabic glides and fricatives in allomorphyp. 257
Morphosyntax and phonologyp. 259
Lexical and postlexical principlesp. 259
Cliticsp. 263
Fossilized and non-fossilized patterns in Faroesep. 264
Conclusionp. 265
Rhythmic structure
Word Stress Patterns in Icelandic and Faroesep. 271
Icelandic word stress patternsp. 271
Native patternsp. 271
Foreign patterns in recent loansp. 274
Word stress patterns in Faroesep. 275
Native wordsp. 275
Loanwords in Faroesep. 278
The accommodation of foreign stress patternsp. 279
Right-strong forms in Icelandicp. 279
The Faroese patternsp. 280
Morphological considerations: Faroese pseudo-morphology?p. 282
Phrasing and Postlexical Phonologyp. 285
Phonological phrasingp. 285
Systematic exceptionsp. 286
Deaccenting of weak morphosyntactic categoriesp. 286
Deaccenting in Icelandic definite noun phrasesp. 289
Pragmatically motivated exceptionsp. 290
Emphatic rephrasingp. 290
Contrast, focus, and given informationp. 291
The phonological consequences of phrasingp. 292
Cohesive laws or sandhi-rules in Icelandicp. 292
Sandhi in Faroesep. 297
Rhythmic rearrangementp. 300
Demarcative signalsp. 300
Stress and glottal onsetp. 301
Right hand signals in Icelandicp. 302
Demarcative signals in Faroesep. 302
Constituency and prominencep. 303
Boundaries or dependencies?p. 303
Domains, directionality, and prominencep. 305
Rhythm and Intonationp. 308
Rhythm and constituencyp. 308
Icelandic intonationp. 313
The tonal inventoryp. 314
Downstep and upstepp. 318
Functional considerationsp. 320
Faroese intonationp. 324
The absence of word tonesp. 326
A note on phonetic datap. 328
Referencesp. 329
Indexp. 343
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.

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