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Re: Moraic codas [was Re: 'Yemls Morphology]

From:jesse stephen bangs <jaspax@...>
Date:Friday, July 13, 2001, 17:26
Mangiat sikayal:

> I tend to see English syllabification as a sort of a nightmare. When I > started studying English in the Elementary School we were told to avoid > writing a word on two lines because of the problems engendered by > syllabification... so I've grown up without knowing how Englishmen actually > break up words. Italian syllabification, OTOH, is really simple.
Actually, if you're just trying to hyphenate words properly, it's not too difficult. The rules are: 1. Don't leave fewer than 3 letters hanging before or after the hyphen 2. Break words across obvious morphemic boundaries 3. Otherwise, any VCV is broken V-CV 4. Any VCCV --> VC-CV 5. Any VCCCV --> VC-CCV The notion of "obvious morphemic boundary" is kind of intuitive, but I think, for example, that 'capable' is broken 'cap-able' in violation of rule 3. Otherwise, 'amateur' is 'ama-teur' (Rule 3), 'amassed' is 'amas-sed' (Rule 4) and 'constable' is 'con-stable' (Rule 5). Not that those are the correct syllables in a linguistic sense. Leaving aside ambisyllabic consonants, English syllabification goes mostly according to the Maximal Onset Principle--anything that can start a word can and should start a syllable. In my dialect: 'middle' ['mI.dl=] 'after' ['&f.tr=] 'constant' ['k_han.st@nt] 'mixture' ['mIks.tSr=] For more detailed information you'll have to ask an English phonetician. Jesse S. Bangs jaspax@u.washington.edu "If you look at a thing nine hundred and ninety-nine times, you are perfectly safe; if you look at it the thousandth time, you are in frightful danger of seeing it for the first time." --G.K. Chesterton

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tristan alexander mcleay <zsau@...>