Paper

The Organization of Lexicons: a Cross-Linguistic Analysis of Monosyllabic Words

Authors
  • Shiying Yang (Brown University)
  • Chelsea Sanker (Brown University)
  • Uriel Cohen Priva (Brown University)

Abstract

Lexicons utilize a fraction of licit structures. Different theories predict either that lexicons prioritize contrastiveness or structural economy. Study 1 finds that the monosyllabic lexicon of Mandarin is no more distinctive than a randomly sampled baseline using the phonological inventory. Study 2 finds that the lexicons of Mandarin and American English have fewer phonotactically complex words than the random baseline: Words tend not to have multiple low-probability components. This suggests that phonological constraints can have superadditive penalties for combined violations, consistent with e.g. Albright (ms.).

Keywords: phonotactics, lexicon, superadditivity, dispersion, phonological distance

How to Cite:

Yang, S., Sanker, C. & Cohen Priva, U., (2018) “The Organization of Lexicons: a Cross-Linguistic Analysis of Monosyllabic Words”, Society for Computation in Linguistics 1(1), 164-173. doi: https://doi.org/10.7275/R58P5XPZ

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Published on
01 Jan 2018