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Last update:
9 February 2010

© John Benjamins
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Voicing in Dutch

(De)voicing – phonology, phonetics, and psycholinguistics

Edited by Jeroen van de Weijer and Erik Jan van der Torre
Leiden University

2007. x, 186 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 4801 5 / EUR 105.00 / USD 158.00
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e-BookAvailable from e-book platforms
978 90 272 9203 2 / EUR 105.00 / USD 158.00
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This volume focuses on the phonology, phonetics and psycholinguistics of voicing-related phenomena in Dutch. Dutch phonology has played a touchstone role in the past few decades where competing phonological theories regarding laryngeal representation have been concerned. Debates have focused on the phonetic facts (Is final neutralization complete or incomplete? Are the assimilation rules phonetic or phonological?) and the most adequate phonological analyses (Is [voice] a binary feature? What constraints are necessary? What is the best way of implementing the role of morphology?). This volume summarises and adds fuel to these debates on several fronts, by providing an overview of analyses so far (rule-based as well as constraint-based) and proposing a new one, by drawing attention to new facts, such as exceptions to final devoicing in certain dialects and the behaviour of loanwords, and by re-examining the phonetic state of affairs and the behaviour of voiced, voiceless and partially devoiced segments in psycholinguistic experiments.


Table of contents

Introduction
vii–xi
1. Issues in Dutch devoicing: Positional faithfulness, positional markedness, and local conjunction
Wim Zonneveld
1–40
2. Representations of [voice]: Evidence from acquisition
René Kager, Suzanne van der Feest, Paula Fikkert, Annemarie Kerkhoff and Tania S. Zamuner
41–80
3. Exceptions to final devoicing
Marc van Oostendorp
81–98
4. Prevoicing in Dutch initial plosives: Production, perception, and word recognition
Petra M. van Alphen
99–124
5. Dutch regressive voicing assimilation as a 'low level phonetic process': Acoustic evidence
Wouter Jansen
125–151
6. Intraparadigmatic effects on the perception of voice
Mirjam T.C. Ernestus and Harald R. Baayen
153–174
Indexes
175–186