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E-book: Sequential Voicing in Japanese: Papers from the NINJAL Rendaku Project

Edited by (Yamagata University), Edited by (National Institute for Japanese Language and Linguistics)
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The papers in this tightly focused collection all report recent research on aspects of rendaku (‘sequential voicing’), the well-known morphophonemic phenomenon in Japanese that affects initial consonants of non-initial elements in complex words (mostly compounds). The papers include broad surveys of theoretical analyses and of psycholinguistic studies, meticulous assessments (some relying on a new database) of many of the factors that putatively inhibit or promoterendaku, an investigation of how learners of Japanese as foreign language deal withrendaku, in-depth examinations of rendaku in a divergent dialect of Japanese and in a Ryukyuan language, and a cross-linguistic exploration ofrendaku-like compound markers in unrelated languages. Since rendaku is ubiquitous but recalcitrantly irregular, it provides a challenge for any general theory of morphophonology. This collection should serve both to restrain oversimpli ed accounts of rendaku and to inspire to further research.
List of contributors
ix
Chapter 1 Introduction
1(12)
Timothy J. Vance
Chapter 2 Generative treatments of rendaku and related issues
13(22)
Shigeto Kawahara
Hideki Zamma
Chapter 3 Psycholinguistic studies of rendaku
35(12)
Shigeto Kawahara
Chapter 4 Rendaku and Identity Avoidance: Consonantal Identity and moraic Identity
47(10)
Shigeto Kawahara
Shin-ichiro Sano
Chapter 5 Rendaku awareness of Japanese learners in Taiwan: Students at Ming Chuan University
57(22)
Nobuyuki Nakazawa
Timothy J. Vance
Mark Irwin
Paul A. Lyddon
Chapter 6 The Rendaku Database
79(28)
Mark Irwin
Chapter 7 Rosen's Rule
107(12)
Mark Irwin
Chapter 8 Rendaku and individual segments
119(20)
Timothy J. Vance
Atsushi Asai
Chapter 9 Rendaku in Okinawan
139(34)
Leon A. Serafim
Chapter 10 Rendaku in Tohoku Japanese: The Kahoku-cho Survey
173(22)
Mizuki Miyashita
Mark Irwin
Ian Wilson
Timothy J. Vance
Chapter 11 Rendaku in cross-linguistic perspective
195(40)
Laurence Labrune
A rendaku bibliography 235(16)
Mark Irwin
References 251(22)
Index 273