Abstract

It is widely agreed that prosodic constituents should mirror syntactic constituents (unless high-ranking prosodic constraints interfere). Because recursion is a feature of syntactic representations, one expects recursion in prosodic representations as well. However, it is of current controversy what kinds of syntactic representation motivate prosodic recursion. In this paper, the use of Phonological Phrase recursion is reviewed in several case studies, chosen because prosodic recursion mostly does not reflect syntactic recursion as defined in current syntactic theory. We provide reanalyses that do not appeal to prosodic recursion (unless syntactically motivated), showing that Phonological Phrase recursion is not necessary to capture the relevant generalizations. The more restrictive use of prosodic recursion we argue for has the following conceptual advantages. It allows for more consistent cross-linguistic generalizations about the syntax–prosody mapping so that prosodic representations more closely reflect syntactic ones. It allows the fundamental syntactic distinctions between clause (and other phases) and phrase to be reflected in the prosodic representation, and it allows cross-linguistic generalizations to be made about the prosodic domain of intonational processes, such as downstep and continuation rise.

Highlights

  • Selkirk (2011, pp. 439–40) sets forth the following principles defining what Ito and Mester (2013) call the Syntax–Prosody Mapping Hypothesis (SPMH): Received: 5 January 2021 Accepted: 5 July 2021 Published: 26 July 2021Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. (1) a. b. c. d.The constituent structures of syntax and prosody correspond

  • It is widely agreed that prosodic constituents should mirror syntactic constituents

  • As we have shown, strictly respecting the requirement that the same types of prosodic constituent should correspond to the same types of syntactic constituent, both within a particular language and crosslinguistically, automatically leads to analyses where prosodic recursion is optimal when it mirrors syntactic recursion

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Summary

Introduction

Selkirk (2011, pp. 439–40) sets forth the following principles defining what Ito and Mester (2013) call the Syntax–Prosody Mapping Hypothesis (SPMH): Received: 5 January 2021 Accepted: 5 July 2021 Published: 26 July 2021. Following Cheng and Downing’s (2016) approach in which phases are prosodically mapped to ι, the Chimwiini pattern can be accounted for by aligning a High tone to the right edge of every φ within the domain of the ι that maps to the phasal γP. This is comparable to the recent proposal by Sande et al (2020) that long-distance morphologically conditioned phonological effects are typically bound by phases. Prosodic categories are mapped to the canonical corresponding syntactic categories defined in (9) unless well-motivated prosodic principles such as binary minimality and STRONGSTART interfere with the syntactically anchored mapping. As a result, prosodic recursion mirrors syntactic recursion in this re-analysis, and the core distinction between phrase and clause is represented in the output of the prosodic grammar

Recursive φ in Basque
Conclusions
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