Phonology and phonetics in Functional Discourse Grammar: Interfaces, mismatches, and the direction of processing

Klaas Seinhorst, S.C. Leufkens

    Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterAcademicpeer-review

    Abstract

    In this paper we discuss the interfaces between phonological and phonetic representations in Functional Discourse Grammar, and the possible mismatches that occur at those interfaces. Firstly, we discuss different definitions of phonological opacity in the literature, and provide examples with these definitions. We argue that mismatches between phonological and phonetic representations can result from competing pressures of articulatory ease and perceptual distinctivity. In order to model these influences and the resulting mismatches adequately, the model should not be organised strictly top-down: we argue that FDG should incorporate bottom-up influences from the phonetics on the phonology. We show that these influences are language- specific, which entails that bottom-up feedback must involve the Grammatical Component. With this modification of the model’s architecture, language users’ tendency to speak efficiently can be incorporated into the model, explaining a wide array of phenomena such as (synchronic) reduction, the cross-linguistic frequency of phonological alternations, and (diachronic) grammaticalization.
    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationInterfaces in Functional Discourse Grammar
    Subtitle of host publicationTheory and applications
    EditorsLucia Contreras-García, Daniel García Velasco
    PublisherDe Gruyter Mouton
    Pages101-126
    ISBN (Electronic)9783110711592
    ISBN (Print)9783110711479
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 23 Aug 2021

    Publication series

    NameTrends in Linguistics. Studies and Monographs
    PublisherDe Gruyter Mouton
    Volume354
    ISSN (Print)1861-4302
    ISSN (Electronic)2199-3734

    Keywords

    • functional phonology
    • phonology–phonetics interfaces
    • mismatches
    • opacity
    • reduction
    • grammaticalization

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