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English Morphology


Prosodic Morphology (1)

CHAPTER I
INTRODUCTION
a.       Background
Phonological theory has developed since 1970s. The most important development was the theory of Autosegmental Phonology proposed by John Goldsmith in his doctoral desertation in 1976. This theory was essentially a theory of tone languages in which the phonemic representation cannot be analysed based on linear agglutinative approach. The fundamental idea here is that phonological representation is more than just a sequence of segments with its properties, rather it consists of a string of segments together with a string of other elements called autosegments and a specified mapping between them.
The principles of this theory were applied by John Mc Carty in 1979 ( in spencer, 1990) to the problem of Semitic root-and-pattern morphology to produce a theory of nonconcatinative morphology. Marantz also used the idea to account reduplication in Agta. He proposes that reduplication is essentially affixation but that what is affixed is a CV (Consonant Vowel) skeleton or prosodic template, the phonemic content of the reduplicative affix is then obtained by copying the complete phoneme melody of the root and linking it to the affixal CV template respecting the principles of association in Autosegmental theory (in Spencer.1990, McCarty. 1992, Roca.1994)

b.      Formulation of The Problem
1.      What is prosodic morphology?
2.      How the relationship about prosodic morphology and reduplication?

c.       Purposes
1.      To know about prosodic morphology
2.      To know the base prosodic morphology
CHAPTER II
DISCUSSION
Prosodic Morphology
1.      Arabic Binyanim
In semitic languages, such as arabic and hebrew, word may be formed by modifying the root itself internally and not simply by the concatenation of affixes and root as happens in an inflecting agglutinating or incorporating language.
The typical word-formation methods in english are :
a.       Affixation
b.      Compounding
c.       Conversion
In semitic morphology we encounter a very different situation. Much of the word-formation takes place root-internally. Infixing and modification of the root rather than the stringing together of discrete morphemes,is the norm.
a. kataba ‘he wrote’
b. kattaba ‘he caused to write’
c. kaataba ‘he corresponded’
d. takaatabuu ‘they kept up a correspondence’
e. ktataba ‘he copied’
f. kitaabun ‘book (nominative)’
g. kuttaabun ‘Koran School (nom.)’
h. kitaabatun ‘act of writing (nom.)’
i.  maktabun ‘office (nom.)’
j.  makaatibu ‘offices (nom.)’
k. kutiba ‘it was written’
l.  nkatab ‘subscribe’
(from McCarthy,1981)

The word in above are built around the consonants ktb which are associated with the meaning “write”.
2.      Prosodic Morphology and Nonconcatenative Morphology
Prosodic morphology was initiated by McCarthy (1979,1981). He noted the similarity in the behavior of vowels introduced into consonantal roots by morphological proccesses in arabic on the one hand, and that of phonological prosodies like tone spreading on the other.
Arabic has elements arranged on three independent tiers at the underlying level or representation in the lexicon, the three tiers being root tier (consonantal tier), the skeletal tier, and the vocalic melody tier.
Root tier :              k                      t                       b

Skeletal tier:          C         V         C         V         C         V

Vocalic melodi tier :          u                     i                      a
These three tiers are linked together by association lines similar to those we used earlier in our discussion of autosegmental phonology.

3.      The Morphem Tier Hypothesis
Prosodic morphology also incorporate the morpheme tier hypothesis. This is the claim that, in the lexicon,the representation of each morpheme in a word occupies a separate tier (McCarthy,1981). So,lexical representation contain another tier, namely the morphem tier is conventionally symbolized by µ.
As you can see in below, which is typical, a root morpheme like ktb may be interrupted by occurences of the vowels that represent a different morpheme.
                                                            µ

Vocalic melody tier     :           a








 
Skeletal tier     :           C         V         V         C         V         C         V

Root tier          :           k                                  t                       b

µ
This example there are two morphemes, the root morpheme representated by the consonantal elements on the root tier, and the morpheme conveying grammatical information, which is represented by the vocalic melody tier.

CHAPTER III
CONCLUSION AND SUGGESTION

Conclusion
Prosodic morphology is a significant developmentin morphological theory. It provides a perspicuous way of describing language with nonconcatenative morphology. Although such language are neither raer nor obscure, they have been neglected or described in an unilluminating manner in most of the modern morphological literature.

Sugestion
I hope we can get the materrial clearly.

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