Abstract (EN):
In many languages, some phonological segments or
structures are allowed at word boundaries only. The
importance of this fact is manifold: it shows that phonology
is not “blind” to the word as a linguistic unit; it can explain
some aspects of speech processing (how speech continua
are split into words); it may help to build software aimed at
identifying word boundaries within larger continua. For
European Portuguese and for other Romance languages
possibly, it is proposed that a “Prosodic Tolerance of the
Word Right Boundary” should play an important role as a
phonotactic cue for word-endings: these languages are
known to be very restrictive as far as the segmental codafilling
is concerned. However, these restrictions are
somehow cancelled at word-endings, which admit
phonotactic combinations that are not allowed elsewhere. A
formalization of this phenomenon, inspired by the logical
formalisms of Declarative Phonology, is also proposed here.
Language:
English
Type (Professor's evaluation):
Scientific
License type: