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The contrastive hierarchy in phonology 2009 Dresher.pdf - CUNY ...

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des<strong>in</strong>ential vowels <strong>in</strong> dialects of Spanish and Italian (Dyck) and <strong>in</strong> Campidanian<br />

Sard<strong>in</strong>ian (Frigeni).<br />

<strong>The</strong> evidence <strong>in</strong> both cases comes from metaphony, a type of vowel<br />

harmony <strong>in</strong> which some high des<strong>in</strong>ential vowels trigger rais<strong>in</strong>g of some stressed<br />

vowels. It is argued that the best account of metaphony triggers <strong>in</strong> these dialects<br />

requires that we dist<strong>in</strong>guish between <strong>contrastive</strong> and redundant feature<br />

specifications. More particularly, the contrasts must be assigned separately to<br />

des<strong>in</strong>ential vowels. As <strong>in</strong> the cases of harmony discussed above, a vowel can<br />

trigger metaphony only if it has the appropriate <strong>contrastive</strong> feature.<br />

7.5.1. Metaphony <strong>in</strong> Iberian Spanish and Italian<br />

In (7.39) are examples of metaphony <strong>in</strong> Pasiego (Spanish), as given by Dyck<br />

(1995), adapted from Penny (1969). Centralization/lax<strong>in</strong>g of unstressed vowels is<br />

not shown. Des<strong>in</strong>ential /u/ triggers rais<strong>in</strong>g of stressed /é/ to [í] and stressed<br />

/ó/ to [ú]. Stressed /í/, /ú/, and /á/ are not affected (7.40).<br />

(7.39) Pasiego metaphony of /é/ and /ó/ triggered by /u/<br />

Unmetaphonized Gloss Metaphonized Gloss<br />

afilit[e@]ros ‘needle-cases’ afilit[i@]ru ‘needle-case’<br />

g[o@]rdo ‘fat (neuter)’ g[u@]rdu ‘fat (mascul<strong>in</strong>e)’<br />

ab[je@]rtos ‘open (plural)’ ab[ji@]rtu ‘open (plural)’<br />

k[we@]rpos ‘bodies’ k[wi@]rpu ‘body’<br />

309

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