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      Drawing the Boundaries of Meaning : Neo-Gricean studies in pragmatics and semantics in honor of Laurence R. Horn 

      Chapter 7. Comparative consequences of the tongue root harmony analysis for proto-Tungusic, proto-Mongolic, and proto-Korean

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      John Benjamins Publishing Company

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          The sounds of the world’s languages

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            The languages of Japan

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              The Contrastive Hierarchy in Phonology

              'Contrast' - the opposition between distinctive sounds in a language - is one of the most central concepts in linguistics. This book presents a fascinating account of the logic and history of contrast in phonology. It provides empirical evidence from diverse phonological domains that only contrastive features are computed by the phonological component of grammar. It argues that the contrastive specifications of phonemes are governed by language-particular feature hierarchies. This approach assigns a key role to abstract cognitive structures, challenging contemporary approaches that favour phonetic explanations of phonological phenomena. Tracing the evolution of the hypothesis that contrastive features play a special role in phonology, it shows how this insight has been obscured by misunderstandings of the role of the contrastive feature hierarchy. Questioning the widely held notion that contrast should be based on minimal pairs, Elan Dresher argues that the contrastive hierarchy is indispensable to illuminating accounts of phonological patterning.
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                Author and book information

                Book Chapter
                2014
                : 141-176
                10.1075/slcs.161.13ko
                2b993df7-c13a-4f20-9be8-8b6897a7248c
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