[Histling-l] Papers in Historical Phonology: vol 3 complete; vol 4 begun
HONEYBONE Patrick
patrick.honeybone at ed.ac.uk
Wed Jul 3 13:15:34 EDT 2019
Papers in Historical Phonology (PiHPh) publishes one volume per year (with articles added as soon as they are cleared for publication). All articles are available on a fully open access basis.
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Volume 4 (2019) has begun publication - it is available here:
http://journals.ed.ac.uk/pihph/issue/view/253
Recently published in volume 4:
* One rule, two frequency effects
- Marjoleine Sloos
* Testing the predictive strength of the comparative method: an ongoing experiment on unattested words in Western Kho‐Bwa languages
- Timotheus A. Bodt, Johann‐Mattis List
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Volume 3 (2018) closed at the end of last year - it is available here:
http://journals.ed.ac.uk/pihph/issue/view/228
Volume 2 has the following contents:
* Aspiration in Basque
- José Ignacio Hualde
* Gradient dissimilation in Mongolian: implications for diachrony
- Adèle Jatteau, Michaela Hejná
* The phonetics of NCh in Tumbuka and its implications for diachronic change
- Laura J. Downing, Silke Hamann
* The Anatolian Dissimilation Rule Revisited
- Paul S. Cohen, Adam Hyllested
* Against a regular epenthesis rule for Hmong-Mien
- Martha Ratliff
* Machine learning in diachronic corpus phonology: mining verse data to infer trajectories in English phonotactics
- Andreas Baumann
* The vowel /əː/ ao in Gaelic dialects
- Christopher Lewin
* Effects of laryngeal features on vowel duration: implications for Winter’s Law
- Chelsea Sanker
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Submissions for PiHPh are always welcome:
http://journals.ed.ac.uk/pihph/about/policies#focusAndScope
http://journals.ed.ac.uk/pihph/information/authors
The University of Edinburgh is a charitable body, registered in Scotland, with registration number SC005336.
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