Repair Strategies for failed feature specification in Japanese: Evidence from loanwords, a reversing word game, and blending

Daiho Kitaoka

Research output: Chapter in Book/Conference proceedingConference contribution

Abstract

This paper demonstrates repair strategies when place feature of the special moras in Japanese (the second half of a long vowel, moraic nasals, and the first half of a double consonant) fail to be specified in a usual manner. I posit three repair processes based on the observations of marked environments (loanwords, a word game called Sakasa Kotoba, blending): (i) over-application of regular structures in core lexicon, (ii) irregular structures that are produced through The Emergence of the Unmarked (TETU), and (iii) game-specific structures. I illustrate that even in marked environments, repair processes make outcome structures as unmarked as possible with these strategies. Based on the observations in the marked environments (mainly from Sakasa Kotoba), I further discuss the process of morification and underlying representations of special moras.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationProceedings of the 2016 Annual Meeting on Phonology
EditorsKaren Jesney, Charlie O’Hara, Caitlin Smith, Rachel Walker
PublisherLinguistic Society of America
Publication statusPublished - 2016

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