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Category-specific effects in Welsh mutation
Author(s) -
Michael Hammond,
Elise Bell,
Skye J. Anderson,
Peredur Webb-Davies,
Diane Kathleen Ohala,
Andrew Carnie,
Heddwen L. Brooks
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
glossa a journal of general linguistics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2397-1835
DOI - 10.5334/gjgl.1007
Subject(s) - welsh , linguistics , noun , task (project management) , psychology , computer science , natural language processing , proper noun , artificial intelligence , philosophy , management , economics
In this paper we investigate category-specific effects through the lens of Welsh mutation. Smith (2011) and Moreton et al. (2017) show that English distinguishes nouns and proper nouns in an experimental blending task. Here we show that Welsh distinguishes nouns, verbs, personal names, and place names in the mutation system. We demonstrate these effects experimentally in a translation task designed to elicit mutation intuitions and in several corpus studies. In addition, we show that these effects correlate with lexical frequency. Deeper statistical analysis and a review of the English data suggests that frequency is a more explanatory factor than part of speech in both languages. We therefore argue that these category-specific effects can be reduced to lexical frequency effects.

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