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Phonology and language use

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The cover of “Phonology and language use” - Open Library.

"Phonology and language use" was published by Cambridge University Press in 2001 - Cambridge, [England], it has 238 pages and the language of the book is English.


“Phonology and language use” Metadata:

  • Title: Phonology and language use
  • Author:
  • Language: English
  • Number of Pages: 238
  • Publisher: Cambridge University Press
  • Publish Date:
  • Publish Location: Cambridge, [England]

“Phonology and language use” Subjects and Themes:

Edition Specifications:

  • Pagination: xviii, 238 p. ;

Edition Identifiers:

AI-generated Review of “Phonology and language use”:


"Phonology and language use" Table Of Contents:

  • 1- Machine generated contents note:
  • 2- 1 Language Use as Part of Linguistic Theory
  • 3- 1.1 Substance and Usage in Phonology
  • 4- 1.2 Some Basic Principles of a Usage-Based Model
  • 5- 1.3 The Creative Role of Repetition
  • 6- 1.4 Frequency Effects
  • 7- 1.5 Phonology as Procedure, Structure as Emergent
  • 8- 1.6 Organization of the Book
  • 9- 1.7 Language as a Part of Human Behavior
  • 10- 2 A Usage-Based Model for Phonology and Morphology
  • 11- 2.1 Introduction
  • 12- 2.2 The Rule/List Fallacy
  • 13- 2.3 Organized Storage
  • 14- 2.4 Morphological Structure Is Emergent
  • 15- 2.5 Rules and Schemas Compared
  • 16- 2.6 Frequency Effects
  • 17- 2.7 Units of Storage
  • 18- 2.8 Phonological Units
  • 19- 2.9 From Local to General Schemas
  • 20- 2.10 Conclusion
  • 21- 3 The Nature of Lexical Representation
  • 22- 3.1 Introduction
  • 23- 3.2 The Phonemic Principle
  • 24- 3.3 A Cognitively Realistic Model of Phonological
  • 25- Representation
  • 26- 3.4 Linguistic Evidence for Detailed and Redundant
  • 27- Storage
  • 28- 3.5 Usage-Based Categorization versus Phonemic
  • 29- 3.6 Phonetic Detail in the Lexicon - Variation and the
  • 30- Early Involvement of the Lexicon and Morphology
  • 31- in Change
  • 32- 3.7 A Model for Sound Change
  • 33- 3.8 Special Reduction of High-Frequency Words and
  • 34- Phrases
  • 35- 3.9 Conclusion
  • 36- 4 Phonological Processes, Phonological Patterns
  • 37- 4.1 Introduction
  • 38- 4.2 Phonetic Etiology and Its Limits
  • 39- 4.3 Articulatory Gestures
  • 40- 4.4 Patterns of Change and Constraints on Processes
  • 41- 4.5 Segments as Emergent Units
  • 42- 4.6 Generalization over Syllable-Initial and Syllable-
  • 43- Final Position
  • 44- 4.7 Phonotactics
  • 45- 4.8 Conclusion
  • 46- 5 The Interaction of Phonology with Morphology
  • 47- 5.1 Introduction
  • 48- 5.2 Morphological versus Phonological Conditioning
  • 49- 5.3 Lexical Storage of Complex Forms, Both Regular
  • 50- and Irregular
  • 51- 5.4 Lexical Strength
  • 52- 5.5 Paradigmatic Relations Expressed as Lexical
  • 53- Connections
  • 54- 5.6 Lexical Classes: Productivity Due to Type
  • 55- Frequency
  • 56- 5.7 The Interaction of Lexical Strength and Lexical
  • 57- Connection
  • 58- 5.8 Product-Oriented Schemas
  • 59- 5.9 Phonological Similarity in Gangs
  • 60- 5.10 Conclusion
  • 61- 6 The Units of Storage and Access: Morphemes, Words,
  • 62- and Phrases
  • 63- 6.1 Introduction
  • 64- 6.2 Phonological Representations of Words
  • 65- 6.3 Morphemes within Words
  • 66- 6.4 Phrases and Constructions with Alternations
  • 67- 6.5 Conclusion
  • 68- 7 Constructions as Processing Units: The Rise and Fall
  • 69- of French Liaison
  • 70- 7.1 Introduction
  • 71- 7.2 Final Consonant Deletion in French
  • 72- 7.3 Grammatical Constructions and Liaison
  • 73- 7.4 Loss of Liaison as Regularization
  • 74- 7.5 Syntactic Cohesion as Frequency of
  • 75- Co-occurrence
  • 76- 7.6 Taking the Phonology Seriously
  • 77- 7.7 Conclusion
  • 78- 8 Universals, Synchrony and Diachrony
  • 79- 8.1 Universals and Explanation
  • 80- 8.2 Searching for Universals
  • 81- 8.3 Phoneme Inventories
  • 82- 8.4 Two Main Mechanisms for Phonological Change
  • 83- 8.5 Syllable Structure
  • 84- 8.6 More Evidence against Universals as Purely
  • 85- H Synchronic
  • 86- 8.7 Diachronic Sources for Formal Universals: The
  • 87- Phonemic Principle and Structure Preservation
  • 88- References
  • 89- Author Index
  • 90- Subject Index
  • 91- Languages Index.

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