Title: Alignment: the third kind of constraints
1Alignment the third kind of constraints
- Today we will look at three alignment effects.
- 1. Separation of domains syllabification.
- 2. Concatenation of constituents
- Simple illustration of alignment effects on word
order - Simple illustration of other structural effects
of alignment - Discussion of fin-second effects in the spirit of
Legendre - 3. Falling together of different kinds of
entities position of heads in phonology. - 4. Positional faithfulness
2The third kind of constraintsAlignment
- Alignment constraints are different from both
markedness and faithfulness. - They require 1) that edges of constituents are
clearly separated, 2) that constituents appear in
a certain order and 3) that constituents fall
together or that they appear in certain specified
positions. - The constituents are generally assumed to be
morphological, syntactic or phonological
(prosodic).
3Definition of alignment
- (1) Generalized Alignment
- Align (Cat1, Cat2, Edge)
- Cat1 and Cat2 are prosodic and grammatical
categories. Edge is Left or Right. - In order for (1) to be true, the edge of Cat1
must fall together with the edge of Cat2. - For all Cat1 there is a Cat2 so that
4Definition of alignment
- Another possibility
- Align (Cat1, Cat2) (no mentioning of edge)
-
- In this case, all that is required is that two
categories coincide - Examples stress with a syllable or a vowel, tone
with a syllable
5First effect of alignmentboundaries1.
Syllabification in German
- The first effect of alignment and the most
well-known in phonology is the requirements that
constituents have clear boundaries. - That morphemes should end in a syllable is the
prototypical example. - Some languages blurr their morpheme edges in
having domains of syllabification larger than the
morpheme French for example les-enfants
sont-allés nager. - German is a good example of clear syllable
boundaries.
61. Syllabification in German
- In compounds and prefixed words, there is no
resyllabification across the morphemes - Prefixation (CV)
- unartig un.aáªtç u.naáªtç naughty
- verärgern váª.áª.gáªn v\.ëáª.gáªn to
annoy - Compounding
- Stockente ?tøk.ent\ ?tø.kent\ mallart
- Riesenaffe ëizn.åf\ ëiz\.nåf\ ape
71. Syllabification in German
- The constraint responsible for the clear (crisp)
syllabification is - ALIGN(stem, syllable, L)
- The left edge of each stem falls together with
the left edge of a syllable. - This constraint is undominated in German.
81. Syllabification in German
- In suffixation, things are different
- When the stem ends with a C and the suffix begins
with a C, the syllabification corresponds to the
morpheme structure. The same is true for the
sequences VV and VC. - CC faul/Fául-heit fauªl.haiªt lazy-ness
- VV Ruhe/rúh-ig ëu.ç quiet
- VC froh/fröh-lich fëø.lç joyful
91. Syllabification in German
- In the case of Faulheit, ruhig and fröhlich,
ONSET and the new constraint do not conflict. - ALIGN(stem, syllable, R)
- (The right edge of each stem falls together with
the right edge of a syllable) -
- In ruhig, there is no onset, but syllabification
separates the morphemes. In Faulheit and
fröhlich, morpheme structure and syllabification
fall together.
101. Syllabification in German
- BUT when the stem ends in a consonant and the
suffix begins with a vowel, things are different - CV Kind/kínd-isch kn.d? childish
- In kindisch, sonnig sunny, Ladung cargo,
lachen to laugh and so on, there is a conflict
between ONSET and ALIGN(stem, syllable, R). ONSET
ranks higher than ALIGN.
111. Syllabification in German
- Conclusion
- In suffixation, the need to satisfy the unmarked
syllable structure (onset) is higher than the
need to separate morphemes. - ONSET gtgt ALIGN-R
121. Syllabification in German
- /kindisch/ ONSET ALIGN-R
- kin.disch
- kind.isch !
131. Syllabification in German
- /unartig/ ALIGN-L ONSET ALIGN-R
- un.ar.tig
- u.nar.tig !
- un.art.ig !
14Side effectsNo coalescence
- Two adjacent vowels, that would fuse together in
a diphthong refrain from doing so because of
morpheme edges. - German ruhig, prosaisch (u.i and a.i vs.
Fleisch meatai or Pfui boo) - The same is true in French anti-alcoolique
(i.a vs. piano ja) which is remarkable, since
French resyllabifies across morpheme and word
boundaries.
15Side effectsGlottal stop epenthesis
- At the beginning of a foot, an onset is
obligatory in German. If the input does not
provide any, a glottal stop is inserted that
functions as the onset of the syllable falling
together with the left edge of the foot - (?Eule) owl, Be(?amte) civil servant,
Cha(?ot) chaotic person, ver?ärgern, Stock?ente - ALIGN(Foot, C, L) gtgt DEP
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17Side effectsLaryngeal constraint
- Inside of a foot, that is before an unstressed
syllable, an onset is not obligatory. No glottal
stop is inserted. - (And at lower levels of the prosodic hierarchy,
some potential onsets are even deleted, like h
and g after a nasal.) - Ehe e\ marriage(but Mahagoni), Zunge tsu\
(but Tango) - ALIGN(Foot, C, L) gtgt DEP gtgt ALIGN(s(V), C, L) gtgt
h, g gtgt ALIGN(s,(\) C, L)
18Domain of syllabification summary
- In German, the domain of syllabification is the
Prosodic Word. - In French it is the Phonological Phrase
- Alignment effects are usually not felt below the
PhPh, but recall the anti-coalescence effect
(biannuel, antialcoolique, transatlantique).
19Alignment in Syntax
- In syntax, one tends to focus on linear order
when one talks about alignment. - We begin with a very simple example, discuss
fin/clitic second effects, and turn to possible
non-linearization effects of alignment finally.
20A Simple Example
- A simple linear example
- Head Left! (a generalization of LEFT)
- Head Right!
- SpecFirst!
- With these three principles, we can derive the
basic word order typology
21SpecFirst gt Head Left
22Head Left gt Spec First
23Spec First gt Head Right
24Head Rightgt Spec First
25Domain of Application
- The result follows if we apply headleft to all
intermediate projections - VP he saw Mary 1 violation
- VP he Mary saw 2 violations
26Word Order Alignment
- The principles Head Left and Head Right can be
formulated in terms of alignment - Head Left
- Align (Phrase, Head, Left)
- Each phrase has a head at its left edge
- Align (Phrase, Head, Right)
- This implies
- Cross-Categorial Harmony
27Constraints with more details
- Align (Verbphrase, Verb, Left)
- Align (Phrase, Head, Right)
- This is a language in which verb phrases are
headinitial, while other categories are headfinal - Recall we discussed a similar specialization of
principles last time (Econ, LexEcon, Gov, LexGov)
28Constraints with more details
- Align (V1, V, Left) X
- Align (VP, V(1), Right) Y
- In such a language, the verb precedes the
objects, but follows other VP material - Chinese?
- Subj . Advs . V . Objects
29Reinterpreting SpecFirst
- SpecFirst
- Align (XP, specifier, left)
- There appears to be no SpecLast e.g. for
wh-phrases - (perhaps in one or two languages ...)
- One needs to decide what to do about VOS and OVS
languages
30Reinterpreting SpecFirst
- SpecFirst thus does not appear to have a
mirror-constraint - Likewise, LEFT does not really seem to have a
mirror-constraint - (These facts can be due to positional
faithfulness effects, see below.)
31More examples for alignment
- V-to-I movement
- Jean embrasse souvent Marie
- Align (Infl, Verb, left)
- If (1) gt (2), we predict that Focus goes to the
slot immediately preceding the verb in German - (1) Align (v-P, Head, right)
- (2) Align (CP, Focus, right)
32A Standard Example Finiteness-Alignment
- The head of a clause comes first in a language
like Irish - D'eirigh Ciaran
- rose-3sg Ciaran
- duirt Seán go-bhfuil Cathal ag rince
- said John that-is Charles ing dance
33A Standard Example Finiteness-Alignment
- In Legendres terms
- Edgemost (Fin, LEFT)
- Align (clause, head, left)
- Align (IP, head, left)
- clause VP/IP ....
- Turkish ranks the mirror-constraint higher ...
34Breton 1a
- Breton does not differ from Irish in an embedded
clause - Kredin ran en deus aret Yann e bark
- believe do-I 3sg has ploughed Y. his field
- but in main clauses ...
35Breton 1b
- But the situation is different in the matrix
clause - Yann en deus aret e bark
- JOHN has ploughed the field
- subject focus
- e bark en deus aret Yann
- object focus
- en deus aret Yann e bark
- FOC FIN VSO
36Breton 1c
- Align (Focus, root clause, left) A
- Align (clause, head, left) B
- Apparently A gt B
- But we also find structures like
- Lennet en deus Yann al levr
- read 3-have John the book
- and NEVER
- En deus lennet Yann al levr
37Breton 1d
- Legendres proposal
- NONINIT (Infl, root clause)
- No Infl must be initial in a root clause
- If
- NONINIT (Infl, root clause) gtgt Align (clause,
head, left) - the finite element goes to SECOND postion
38Breton 1e
- NONINIT (Infl, root clause)
- can trigger verb movement that has no pragmatic
etc. side-effect ...
39Non-Initiality
- Non-Initiality is a fairly funny alignment
constraint that is of some importance for wide
areas of syntax.
40German
- In German, the finite verb must be leftmost in
root clauses, but non-initial if the root clause
is a declarative or a wh-question - das Buch liest der Mann
- the book reads the man
- was liest der Mann
- what reads the man
41German
- Non-Initiality is guaranteed by
- Expletive insertion
- es kommt jemand
- there comes someone
- Eocus/wh-movement
- Movement of first element of clause
- der Mann vergisst seinen Text
- the man forgets his text
42Topic Drop
- Topic-Drop overrides Non-Initiality
- Hab ich schon gesehen
- (E) have I already seen
- gefällt ihm nicht
- pleases him not
43Basque
- Jonek hori daki
- John that knows
- Align (clause, head, right)
- nork daki hori
- who knows that
- JONEK daki hori
- Align (focus/wh, clause, left) A
- Align (wh-clause, head, left) B
- A gt B or NonInit (no evidence for latter)
44Icelandic/Yiddish
- Align (Clause, head, left)
- NonInit (Fin, clause)
- Generalized Verb-Second-Effect
- az morgn vet dos yingl oyfn veg zen a kats
- That tomorrow will the boy on the way see a cat
45Icelandic/Yiddish
- Stylistic movement/expletive insertion to fulfill
NonInit - Fram hefur komidh adh fiskadh hefur veridh í
leyfisleysi - forth has come that fished has been illegally
- Fram hefur komidh adh thadh hefur veridh fiskadh
í leyfisleysi - forth has come that it has been fished illegally
46English
- Align (Phrase, Head, Left)
- Align (Fin, ROOT ,Left)
- Verb-Second-Effect in Questions only
- Who did you see?
- I think that Bill, he likes
- Again, alignment of wh-phrases would be sufficient
47Croatian Clitics
- All clitics appear in a cluster
- tko li mu ga je dao bez pitanja
- who-L-him-it-is given without question?
- Clitics appear in second position
- Ivan mu je jucer dao auto
- Ivan him-be yesterday give car
48Some surprises
- Names can be split up
- Lava sam Tolstoja citao
- Lew am-I Tolstoy read
- Lav je Tolstody citao knjigu
49Prosody
- The relevance of prosody
- e.g. parentheticals .
- oni su ja tako mislim nazvali ga jucer
- they be I so believe called him yesterday
50Prosodically triggered movement
- Apparently, the cluster must not be initial in
any intonation phrase - Align (clause, Agr, left)
- NonInit (Agr, IntonPhrase)
- Prosodic Triggern of movement
- dao mu ga je Ivan
- given him.it.is Ivan
51Clitic Placement in Polish
- My znowu wczoraj poszli smy do parku
- We again yesterday went are to park
- My znowu wczoraj smy poszli do parku
- My znowu smy wczoraj poszli do parku
- My smy znowu wczoraj poszli do parku
- smy my znowu wczoraj poszli do parku
- In Polish, only the non-initiality constraint has
a high rank!
52Other effects of alignment
- The EPP
- NonInit (Fin, Z)
- This seems to be true for languages in which
anything may precede the finite element. - Z root clauses in German, Scandinavian and
Breton - Z IP
- English type languages ....
53Some possible consequences
- We would thus be able to derive the various
versions of the EPP from Non-Init. - This would explain why there are no systematic
object expletives - This would explain (hopefully) why
- there is normally just ONE expletive position
- But why is Non-Init restricted to finite
elements?
54The Alternative
- Align (IP, specifier, left)
- This alignment principle guarantees that each IP
begins with a specifier. - This also looks like the EPP!
55Other Implications
- One may wonder, however, why there seems to be no
mirror-constraint - Align (IP, specifier, right)
- OV languages do not seem to respect the EPP at
all.
56Headedness
- Headedness, however, may be understood as a
consequence of the alignment principles (this
could replace OblHd) - This presupposes traces, or a cyclic version of
OT
57Second effect of alignment 2. Place of affixes
- In German, English, as well as in all languages
without infixation, the alignment constraint
responsible for the positioning of prefixes and
suffixes are always higher-ranking than all
prosodic constraints that could trigger an affix
shift. - Instrument-al, instrument-less
- Ge-länd-e, kind-isch, un-art-ig
582. Place of affixes Infixation in Tagalog
- In Tagalog (McCarthy Prince 1993b) the infix
-um- is located after the onset of the first
syllable, if there is one. - Root um Root
- aral um-aral to teach
- sulat s-um-ulat to write (um-sulat)
- gradwet gr-um-adwet to graduate
592. Place of affixes Infixation in Tagalog
- It is more important to fulfill the constraint
against codas than to align a prefix with the
left edge of a word. - NOCODA gtgt ALIGN(Prefix, PW, L)
- Violations of Align-constraints are gradient, but
as always violations are minimal.
60Infixation in Tagalog
61Infixation in Tagalog
62Infixation in Tagalog
633. Stress
- The third effect of alignment is the falling
together of different kinds of constituents. - Stress is aligned with syllables, feet, prosodic
words etc. - At the interface with syntax, stress can be
asociated with lexical elements or with XPs, etc.
64Third effect of alignment 3. Stress
- At the interface with semantic, stress is
associated with the scope of focus operators, for
instance - John only sees his OWN reflection.
- John only sees his own REFLECTION.
- John only SEES Mary (but does not hear her).
65Third effect of alignment 3. Stress
- Stress is often peripheral final, penultimate or
initial, which speaks for an analysis in terms of
alignment. - Stress is grouping of constituents. At the lower
level, syllables are grouped into feet. - Feet are trochaic (left-headed) or iambic
(right-headed). This alignment is trivial, since
feet consist of two syllables.
663. Stress
- More interesting is what happens at higher
levels, in a prosodic word or a phrase. There,
too, stress can be interpreted as standing for
groupings of constituents, and there, too, it is
peripheral. But, since feet are the relevant
constituents, when feet are trochaic and stress
final, stress is penultimate.
673. Stress
- English stress (McCarthy Prince 1993b)
- ALIGN(PrWd, Ft, L) all Prosodic Words start with
a left-aligned foot - ALIGN(Ft, PrWd, R) all feet are right-aligned
with the right edge of the word - (Tàta)ma(góuchee) Ta(tàma)(góuchee)
- Main stress is determined independently.
68German stress
- German stress
- ALIGN(PrWd, Ft, R) all Prosodic Words end with a
right-aligned foot. - ALIGN(PrWd, Ft, R) all Prosodic Words start with
a left-aligned foot. - These two constraints give a stress pattern with
exactly two stresses, one initial (if possible)
and one final. The final one is the main stress. -
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714. Positional faithfulness
- Positional faithfulness has been recently
introduced into OT phonology by Beckman and
Steriade. - Its effects are often comparable with the effects
of alignment, though the basic idea is
different. - It says that some positions are more prominent
than others in terms of perception, and that
prominent positions allow more contrasts.
724. Positional faithfulness
- As an example, consider Final Devoicing in German
- loben lo.bn to praise Lob
lop praise, N. - b. Hände d hands Hand t hand
- c. kluge g clever, infl. klug k
clever, uninfl. - d. brave v good, infl brav f good,
uninfl. - e. niesen z to sneeze nies s sneeze,
imp. - f. OrangeoËã?\ orange, N. orange oËã?
adj. -
734. Positional faithfulness
- Lombardis explanation of FD
- Voiced obstruents are allowed only before
tautosyllabic sonorants. - Standard explanation It is an active process
taking place at the end of syllables. -
744. Positional faithfulness
- VDOBSTR Obstruents are voiceless.
- Faithfulness constraint (Beckman 199838)
- IDENT(voice)
- For all segments x, y, where x Î Input and y Î
Output, - if xRy, then y is voice iff x is voice.
- Correspondent segments must agree in voicing.
754. Positional faithfulness
- Positional faithfulness constraint (Beckman
199838) - IDENT(voice)Onset
- For all segments x, y, where x Î Input and y Î
Output - and y is syllabified in onset position, if xRy,
then y is voice iff x is voice. - Onset segments and their input correspondents
must agree in voicing.
764. Positional faithfulness
- Exercise
- Show how these three constraints interact to
deliver the difference in voicing in Lob/loben.