
This book is an up-to-date, comprehensive, and theoretically coherent account of the phonology of modern Welsh. It begins by describing the history of Welsh, its relation to the other Celtic languages and its phonetic inventory. Six chapters then explore the structures underlying its sound system. The first considers the phonetic background, including segment inventories and the characteristics of the main dialects. The second examines phonological structures including syllables, feet, phonotactics, and stress. The third and fourth analyse phonological alternations in the language, such as vowel mutation and assimilation, and foot-based phenomena such as the behaviour of /h/ and antepenultimate deletion. The fifth examines the phonological representation of initial consonant mutation, one of the best known and least understood characteristics of Celtic phonology in which the initial consonant of a word undergoes a systematic alternation with a consonant that is phonetically different. The concluding chapter summarizes the work's major points and arguments and highlights opportunities for research. S. J. Hannahs approaches the subject from the perspective of generative phonological theory. He couches specific analyses in the constraint-based framework of optimality theory but presents data in as theory-neutral a way as possible to ensure its accessibility to linguists of all theoretical persuasions.
This book investigates the phonological structure of modern Welsh, providing a comprehensive analysis of its sound system within the framework of generative phonological theory. S. J. Hannahs utilizes a constraint-based approach, specifically optimality theory, to explain the complex phonetic and phonological patterns inherent in the language while maintaining a focus on empirical data accessibility for a broad linguistic audience.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Linguists and scholars frequently cite this work as a foundational reference for understanding the complexities of Celtic sound systems. Readers often note the academic density of the prose, which is balanced by the author's commitment to presenting data in a manner accessible to researchers across various theoretical backgrounds.
Page Count:
352
Publication Date:
2013-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0191504890
ISBN-13:
9780191504891
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