Linguistics Colloquium: Mark Aronoff (Stony Brook)

Mark Aronoff (Stony Brook) presents:

New methods give answers to old questions: the morphology of English spelling

English is the most widely used written language in the world, yet its writing system has been derided since the beginning. Its basis remains a puzzle. Writing systems tend to encode two levels of language: lexical or phonological. Recent findings reveal that modern-day English spelling, unlike almost all others, also encodes individual affixes, even at the expense of phonological consistency. For example, the word-final coda /l̩/ is reliably spelled as <al> when the word is an adjective and in as <le> or <el> otherwise. The system self-organized gradually over the last half millennium, following well-understood principles of competition that govern all evolution, from physics to culture. Although the questions that we address are far from new, research on them has become possible only very recently, because answering the questions has required electronic resources and methods that were not available to those who first asked them.











When: Thu., Oct. 18, 2018 at 4:15 pm - 6:00 pm
Where: Graduate Center, CUNY
365 Fifth Ave.
212-817-7000
Price: Free
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Mark Aronoff (Stony Brook) presents:

New methods give answers to old questions: the morphology of English spelling

English is the most widely used written language in the world, yet its writing system has been derided since the beginning. Its basis remains a puzzle. Writing systems tend to encode two levels of language: lexical or phonological. Recent findings reveal that modern-day English spelling, unlike almost all others, also encodes individual affixes, even at the expense of phonological consistency. For example, the word-final coda /l̩/ is reliably spelled as <al> when the word is an adjective and in as <le> or <el> otherwise. The system self-organized gradually over the last half millennium, following well-understood principles of competition that govern all evolution, from physics to culture. Although the questions that we address are far from new, research on them has become possible only very recently, because answering the questions has required electronic resources and methods that were not available to those who first asked them.

Buy tickets/get more info now