Volume 22, Winter 2000

Permanent URI for this collection

Browse

Recent Submissions

Now showing 1 - 5 of 7
  • Item
    Open Access
    Calgary Working Papers in Linguistics, Volume 22, Winter 2000
    (University of Calgary, 2000-01) Atkey, Susan; Carson, Jana; Dobrovolsky, Michael
    The editors of this volume, Susan Atkey, Jana Carson, and Michael Dobrovolsky, are pleased to present the twenty-second issue of the Calgary Working Papers in Linguistics published by the Department of Linguistics at the University of Calgary. The papers contained in this volume represent works in progress and as such should not be considered in any way final or definitive.
  • Item
    Open Access
    Head in Yorùbá derived nouns
    (University of Calgary, 2000-01) Adéwọlé, L O
    Studies on Yorùbá have typically ignored or undervalued the place of word structure within a generative grammar. This neglect has a far reaching effect on the study of the language first, because words are the basic units in the description of any language and second, because the Yorùbá word structure offers a microcosm of some of the descriptive problems of sentences in the language. In this paper, therefore, we shall take a critical look at the notion, head, in the Yorùbá morphology within a variant of the Generalised Phrase Structure Grammar (GPSG henceforth) developed by Cann (1986).
  • Item
    Open Access
    Pronoun acquisition and the morphological feature geometry
    (University of Calgary, 2000-01) Hanson, Rebecca
    The acquisition of pronouns has received limited attention in the literature, and there are few studies which deal with this topic in detail. From the data available, clear and sometimes surprising patterns of uniformity and variability emerge. Previous attempts to account for these patterns have all faced similar problems, specifically in explaining the heterogeneous initial set of pronouns (first person singular, and third person singular inanimate), and in accounting for the variation that is found. In this paper I find that these previously problematic areas are readily accounted for using the hierarchy of morphological features proposed by Ritter and Harley (1998).
  • Item
    Open Access
    Secondary stress in Russian compound words: evidence from poetic metrics
    (University of Calgary, 2000-01) Karpacheva, Olga
    In this paper I argue that it is necessary to distinguish between stress which is inherent in words and stress which is assigned at a phrasal level. More specifically, I argue that secondary stress in Russian compounds is superimposed on the existing word stress contours by rhythm. Support in favor of this claim comes from the distribution of secondary stress in Russian poetry. I show that secondary stress in Tutčev's verse is assigned to the first constituent of compounds only in strong metrical positions.
  • Item
    Open Access
    Morley Stoney pronouns: a feature geometry
    (University of Calgary, 2000-01) Mills, Timothy Ian
    The pronoun set of Morley Stoney (referred to simply as Stoney from this point) is not complex-it contains only seven forms-but it is organized in a unique way. In this paper, I will argue that, despite its uniqueness, the pronominal system in Stoney fits the geometry set out in Harley and Ritter's (1998) manuscript. I will demonstrate how Stoney reflects some of the more straightforward aspects of the theory, as well how one might account for the language's idiosyncratic aspects without straining the theory.