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El. knyga: Structure of Tone

(Senior Lecturer, Department of English Language and Literature, National University of Singapore)
  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 20-May-1999
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press Inc
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780195353327
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  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 20-May-1999
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press Inc
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780195353327
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This book argues a fresh theory about the structure of tone. Bao investigates a wide range of tone sandhi data from various Chinese dialects and other Asian tone languages, providing empirical support for his proposal that tone is a formal entity which consists of register and contour. Bao establishes a clear typological distinction between register tone languages and contour tone languages whose contour tones have a more complex structure.

Recenzijos

Finally a book all about tone!...Bao's survey of the development of tone theory is excellent, and is an excellent educational resource on the topic...This book could be a stepping stone to further developments for a tonal theory that is truly universal. * Notes on Linguistics *

Introduction
3(7)
The Geometry of Tone
3(2)
Tone as Autosegmental Tier
5(3)
A Brief Note on Chinese Dialects
8(2)
Theories of Tone: A Survey
10(35)
Yin-Yang Registers
10(1)
Chao (1930)
11(2)
Tone in Chinese Linguistics
13(1)
Wang (1967)
14(3)
Woo (1969)
17(3)
Halle and Stevens (1971)
20(2)
Yip (1980)
22(3)
Clements (1983)
25(3)
Hyman (1986)
28(1)
Shih (1986)
29(1)
Inkelas (1987)
30(2)
Hyman (1993)
32(2)
Yip (1989)
34(1)
Duanmu (1990, 1994)
35(2)
Snider (1990)
37(3)
Chang (1992)
40(1)
Tsay (1994)
41(4)
The Representation of Tone
45(71)
The Geometry of Tone
45(6)
Motivation of Underlying Contour
51(10)
Tonal Inventory and Tonal Contour
52(1)
Natural Class and Tonal Contour
52(1)
Changzhi
53(1)
Lingxi and Luoyang
53(3)
Lu
56(1)
The OCP and Tonal Contour
56(1)
Danyang and Pingyao
57(1)
Yantai
58(1)
Tianjin
59(2)
Assimilation in tone Sandhi
61(36)
Tone Assimilation
61(1)
Danyang
62(9)
Changzhi
71(4)
Register Assimilation
75(1)
Pingyao
75(4)
Chaozhou
79(4)
Contour Assimilation
83(1)
Zhenjiang
84(5)
Wenzhou
89(4)
Feature Assimilation
93(4)
Contours and Other Matters
97(19)
Distributional Properties of Tones
97(1)
Distribution of Even Tones
97(3)
Distribution of Falling/Rising Tones
100(1)
Convex and Concave
101(1)
Changzhi
102(5)
Xining
107(4)
Contour Simplification
111(5)
The Autosegmental Nature of Tone
116(29)
Tonal Morphemes
118(16)
Danyang Word Melodies
118(1)
Wenzhou Definitive Morpheme
119(1)
Cantonese Changed Tones
120(7)
Prefixes in Jiading Miao
127(3)
Diminutive Suffix in Shenmu and Daye
130(2)
Tone as Inflectional or Derivational Affix
132(2)
Tone under Segmental Deletion
134(4)
Cantonese
134(2)
Fanqie Languages
136(2)
The Bridge Effect
138(7)
Tone in Phonological Representation
145(36)
Dual Nature of Tone
145(7)
Structure-Dependency of Tone Stability
152(7)
Segmentalization of Tone
159(14)
Phonological Processes of Tone Sandhi
173(8)
Assimilation
174(4)
Dissimilation
178(2)
Other Sandhi Effects
180(1)
The Mid Tone
181(19)
Mid Tone as Default
181(3)
Dual Structure of the Mid Tone
184(4)
Numerals
188(3)
Classifiers
191(4)
R-Lowering Reconsidered
195(5)
Epilogue
200(18)
Contour System versus Level System: A Parametric View
200(6)
Some Problematic Cases for the Theory
206(12)
Syllabic Nasals and Obstruents
207(2)
Unusual Tonal Inventories
209(2)
Convex and Concave
211(3)
Concluding Remarks
214(4)
Notes 218(11)
Appendix 229(12)
References 241(10)
Index 251