Íslenskt mál og almenn málfræði


Íslenskt mál og almenn málfræði - 01.01.1984, Side 138

Íslenskt mál og almenn málfræði - 01.01.1984, Side 138
136 Kristján Arnason be placed at all. A salient feature of Modern Icelandic phonological patterning is that monosyllables may be formed from bisyllabics by deletion of the second syllable, and conversely a disyllabic can be formed by adding an appropriate ending to a monosyllable without any sort of restructuring being visible in the remaining (or original) monosyllable. Thus, the same sort of structure prevails in the mono- syllable hest [hes$] as in the first syllable of hestur [hes^Yr]. This seems to be a general feature of the phonology; pairs like vors : vorsins [vojs], ‘spring’ (gen. sg. indefinite vs. definite); gelt : gelta [íe]^] ‘a bark’ vs. ‘to bark’; diskur : diskó : disk [$lsg] ‘a plate’ (nom.) vs. ‘discoteque’ vs. ‘a plate’ (acc.); œskti, æskt [ais(g)<£| or [ais(x)$], ‘to wish’ (past vs. past participle); bölva : bölv [þœlv] ‘to swear’ vs. ‘the act of swearing’, show, as far as I can judge, no difference in the structure of the stressed syllables. This suggests that a case can be made for looking at the invariant forms in the respective pairs listed above as units in the phonological structure of Icelandic. This would entail syllabication of the sort hest.ur, æskt.i, bölv.a etc. We may note that this sort of syllabication is assumed to be phono- logically motivated but it does not derive from direct phonetic support by way of e.g. experiments showing regularities in speech production or speech perception that would unambiguously entail the above syl- labication. It seems also that it is safe to maintain that the motivation is not morphologically based (and then no motivation for the phonological syllable), although the pattern observed is heavily made use of in the morphosyntax (most of the second syllables being representatives of morphological units as inflectional endings). The phonological char- acter of the motivation is reflected in the fact that the structures oc- curring in positions after the first syllable regularly show different phonological patterns from those characteristic of the initial syllables. Firstly, it may be mentioned that lexical primary stress falls on initial syllables, and the phonological systems available to the unstressed syl- lables are much more restricted than those available to the stressed ones: there are fewer vowel qualities (the most common are [a,l,Y]) and length is excluded. Another phonological phenomenon that seems to have a bearing on this is the fact that the length of the stressed vocalism, which is regularly assumed to have two degrees, long and
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Íslenskt mál og almenn málfræði

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