Greek Prosodies and the Nature of Syllabification

D. Steriade, 1982

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This thesis presents an autosegmental approach to certain prosodic phenomena of Ancient Greek: vowel length, geminate structures, aspiration, syllabic assignments.  The Greek material – supplemented by Sanskrit and Latin – is used to develop a framework for the description of syllabification processes.

I claim that phonological strings are syllabified by a sequence of syllabic incorporation rules: a universal rule pairing of CV sequences into core CV syllables, followed by language-specific rules that incorporate into these syllables more of the neighboring segments.  I claim that complex onsets and branching rimes are created by such languaeg-specific syllable adjunction rules.

I show that differences among the syllable structures of Latin, Greek and Sanskrit can be described as having two sources: different ordering relations among the syllable adjunction rules and different conditions on the relative sonority of adjacent tautosyllabic consonants.  The latter parameter turns out to predict both the differences between the constraints on clustering in Greek and Sanskrit and the number of consonants each of these languages allows in the onset.

The relatively complex syllable structure of Greek is shown to require no reference to syllabic constituents other than onset and rime.  The possible evidence for syllabic nodes other than onset and rime is shown in fact to be evidence for intermediate partially syllabified strings containing unaffiliated segments.

Thesis supervisor:         Morris Halle

Title:                             Institue Professor

Table of Contents

Introduction                                                                                                                  8

Chapter I          The framework                                                                         13

            1          Tiers of representation                                                              13

                        1.1       Introduction                                                                              13

                        1.2       Skeleton/core relations                                                  14

                                    1.2.1    Contour segments                                                         17

                                    1.2.2    Geminates                                                                    27

                        1.3       Linked matrices                                                                        41

                                    1.3.1    The autosegmental theory of assimilation rules    41

                                    1.3.2    Geminates in the output of partial assimilation rules         47

                                    1.3.3    Partially assimilation clusters and constraints on

                                                geminates                                                                     52

                                    1.3.4    The need for a Shared Features convention                   67

            2          Melody – Skeletion – Syllable mapping                                     70

            3          Syllable structure and syllabification                                                       72

                        3.1       Onsets and rimes                                                                      72

                        3.2       Syllabic parsing                                                             74

                                    3.2.1   

                                    3.2.2    A proposal                                                                   78

                                    3.2.3    Core syllable rules and stray segments               84

                                    3.2.4    Ordering constraints                                                      86

                        3.3       Exhaustive syllabification and stray erasure                                89

                        3.4       The sonority hierarchy                                                   91

            4          Lexical phonology                                                                                 100

Footnotes                                                                                                                     102

Chapter II        Compensatory Lengthening and Resyllabification Types in Greek           113

            1          Introduction                                                                                          113

            2          Compensatory lengthening and the empty node convention                    114

                        3.1       Loss of w in Ancient Greek                                                       117

                        3.2       The formal statement of CL and of resyllabification                    125

                                    3.2.1    The interaction of resyllabification and CL                     126

                                    3.2.2    CL, degemination and resyllabification               134

                                                3.2.2.1 Degemination                                                    136

                                                3.2.2.2 Why degemination does not trigger CL in

                                                            Greek                                                               139

                                                3.2.2.3 Formulating CL without a skeleton                    142

            4          CL after s-deletion                                                                                146

                        4.1       The analysis                                                                              146

                        4.2       Sonorant-h metathesis                                                               149

                        4.3       The autosegment h                                                                    154

            5          Conclusion                                                                                           163

Footnotes                                                                                                                     168

Chapter III       Attic Syllable Structure                                                            

            1          Introduction                                                                                          175

            2          Evidence for syllabification in Attic                                                        176

            3          Syllabic divisions in the Attic prosody                                        186

            4          Reduplication                                                                                        195

            5          Syllable structure and cluster simplification                                             209

                        5.1       Introduction                                                                              209

                        5.2       Possible clusters and their distribution                            210

                                    5.3.1    Cluster simplification                                                     216

                                    5.3.2    The minimal sonority difference in Attic              218

                        5.4       The segmental linking condition                                     223

                        5.5       Underlying clusters and segmental linking rules               230

                                    5.5.1    Laryngeal feature assimilation                            230

                                    5.5.2    The grammar of aspiration in Attic                                 233

                                                5.5.2.1 Grassmann’s Law                                             234

                                                5.5.2.2 Aspiration assimilation and Bartholamae’s

                                                            Law in Greek                                                   237

                                                5.5.2.3                                                                         239

                                    5.5.3    Coronal clusters                                                            249

                                    5.5.4    Labial clusters                                                               252

                                    5.5.5    Y-clusters in Attic                                                         261

                        5.6       Excursus: the heterosyllabicity condition                         272

                        5.7       Back to the segmental linking condition                          278

            6          The order of syllabification operations                                       285

Footnotes                                                                                                                     293

Chapter IV       The Structure of Heterosyllabic Initials

            1          Introduction                                                                                          301

            2          Heterosyllabic initials in 1st millenium Greek                              304

                        2.1       Reduplication                                                                            304

                        2.2       Loss of interconsonantal s, resyllabification and

                                    reduplication                                                                             308

            3          Heterosyllabic initials in Sanskrit                                                            312

                        3.1       Reduplication                                                                            312

                        3.2       Loss of interconsontal s                                                 328

            4          Heterosyllabic initials in 2nd millenium Greek                             333

                        4.1       Mycenaean spelling conventions                                                333

                        4.2       The sh rule in common Greek                                                340

                        4.3       Archaic reduplications                                                   350

            5                                                                                                                      353

            6          Syllabification across major boundaries                                     355

            7          Clusters across major boundaries, adjunction rules and the stray

                        erasure convention                                                                                361

Footnotes                                                                                                                     373

s and the stray

                        erasure convention                                                                                361

Footnotes                                                                                                                     373