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THEORY: ambisyllabicity & gemmination

From:dirk elzinga <dirk.elzinga@...>
Date:Tuesday, October 10, 2000, 21:17
On Sun, 8 Oct 2000, Raymond Brown wrote:

> But what I'm really wanting to see is how Dirk's notation which he used for > Japanese _hatten_, works out with English _happy_ and Welsh _hapus_ where, > although the {p} is written only once, it is certainly geminated and the > English {pp} is not. The English is ['h&pi] or ['hapI], depending on > dialect, whereas the Welsh is ['happ_h1s] or ['happ_h1s] depending on > dialect.
Your wish is my command :-); here you go. 'happy' 'hapus' s s s s syllable /|\ | /|\ /|\ / m m m / m m / m m mora | | | | | | |/ | | h & p i h a p 1 s segment It should be remembered that I consider 'happy' to be syllabified after the /p/; the transcription also reflects a General American pronunciation rather than an Insular one. For the northern dialects which you mentioned, I don't know enough to talk about the syllabification properties of medial consonants. My hunch is that it receives a less marked structure 'happy' s s syllable /| /| / m / m mora | | | | h a p I segment But I just don't know for sure. The representation of the Welsh example should be pretty clear by now. Dirk -- Dirk Elzinga dirk.elzinga@m.cc.utah.edu