Publications: By date

 

Order by theme  |  Order by publication type

 

2008

de Lacy, Paul and Patrik Bye (in press for 2008). Metrical influences on lenition and fortition. In Joaquim de Carvalho, Tobias Scheer, and Philippe Ségéral (eds.) Lenition and Fortition. Studies in Generative Grammar. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
[abstract] [chapter]

de Lacy, Paul (in press for January 2008). Phonological evidence. In Steve Parker (ed.). Phonological argumentation: Essays on evidence and motivation. Equinox Publications, ch.2.
[abstract] [chapter] [handout]

 

2007

de Lacy, Paul (2007).  Quality of data in metrical stress theory.  Cambridge Extra magazine.
[article]

de Lacy, Paul (2007).  How to say “Clinton”.  Cambridge Extra magazine.

        [article] [audio – mp3]

de Lacy, Paul (ed.) (2007). The Cambridge Handbook of Phonology. Cambridge University Press.
http://handbookofphonology.rutgers.edu

de Lacy, Paul (2007). Freedom, Interpretability, and the Loop. In Sylvia Blaho, Patrik Bye, and Martin Krämer (eds.). Freedom of Analysis? Studies in Generative Grammar (SSG) 95.  Mouton de Gruyter, pp. 86-118.
[abstract] [talk] (chapter removed from this website per Mouton’s request).

de Lacy, Paul (2007). The interaction of tone, sonority, and prosodic structure. In Paul de Lacy (ed.) The Cambridge Handbook of Phonology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ch.12 (pp. 281-307).

de Lacy, Paul (2007). Themes in phonology. In Paul de Lacy (ed.) The Cambridge Handbook of Phonology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ch.1 (pp. 5-29).
 

2006

de Lacy, Paul (2006). Markedness: Reduction and Preservation in Phonology. Cambridge Studies in Linguistics 112. Cambridge University Press.
[abstract] [Google books excerpt] [corrections] [handout] [talk]
[Reviews: Nevins & Plaster (2008) Journal of Linguistics 44.3.]

de Lacy, Paul (2006). Transmissibility and the role of the phonological component. Theoretical Linguistics 32.2: 185-196.
[abstract] [article] ([target commentary article] [author's reply to my and others' articles])
[sources]

de Lacy, Paul and John Kingston (2006). Synchronic explanation. ms. Rutgers University and University of Massachusetts at Amherst. (32 pages).
[abstract] [article]

de Lacy, Paul (2006). Review of J. Lynch (ed.) Issues in Austronesian Historical Phonology. Journal of the Polynesian Society 115.1: 100-102.
[review]

 

2004

de Lacy, Paul (ed.-in-chief) (2004); Marc Richards and Lluïsa Astruc (eds.).   Cambridge Occasional Papers in Linguistics 1. University of Cambridge.

de Lacy, Paul (2004). Markedness conflation in Optimality Theory. Phonology 21.2:145-199.
[abstract] [article]

de Lacy, Paul (2004). Conflation and hierarchies. In Lluïsa Astruc-Aguilera & Marc Richards (eds.) Cambridge Occasional Papers in Linguistics 1. Cambridge, UK: University of Cambridge Linguistics Department, pp.83-100.
[abstract] [chapter]

de Lacy, Paul (2004). Maximal Words and the Māori passive. In John McCarthy (ed.) Optimality Theory in phonology: A reader. Blackwell, pp. 495-512.
[chapter]

 

2003

Carpenter, Angela, Andries Coetzee and Paul de Lacy (eds.) (2003). Papers in Optimality Theory II. University of Massachusetts Occasional Papers (UMOP) 26. Amherst, MA: GLSA Publications.

de Lacy, Paul (2003).  Constraint universality and prosodic phrasing in Māori. In Angela Carpenter, Andries Coetzee, and Paul de Lacy (eds.) Papers in Optimality Theory II. UMOP 26. Amherst, MA: GLSA Publications, pp.59-79. ROA 561.
[abstract] [chapter]

de Lacy, Paul (2003). Maximal words and the Māori passive.  In Andrea Rakowski and Norvin Richards (ed.) Proceedings of AFLA VIII: The eighth meeting of the Austronesian formal linguistics association. MIT Working Papers in Linguistics 44. Cambridge, MA: MIT Linguistics Dept, pp.20-39.  ROA 520.
[abstract] [chapter] [handout] [talk]

de Lacy, Paul (2003). Review of J.Bradshaw and K.Rehg (eds.) Issues in Austronesian Morphology. Journal of the Polynesian Society 12.2: 172-174.
[review]

 

2002

de Lacy, Paul (2002). The interaction of tone and stress in Optimality Theory.  Phonology 19.1: 1-32.
[abstract] [article]

de Lacy, Paul (2002). The formal expression of markedness. Doctoral dissertation, University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Amherst, MA: GLSA Publications.  ROA 542.
[abstract] [dissertation]

 

2001

de Lacy, Paul (2001).  Markedness in prominent positions. In Ora Matushansky, Albert Costa, Javier Martin-Gonzalez, Lance Nathan, and Adam Szczegielniak (eds.) HUMIT 2000, MIT Working Papers in Linguistics 40. Cambridge, MA: MITWPL, pp.53-66. ROA 432.
[abstract] [chapter] [ROA (longer) version] [handout] [talk]

de Lacy, Paul (2001). Predicate nominals in Maori, Minimalist Syntax Archive #179.
[article]

 

2000

de Lacy, Paul and Anita Nowak (eds.) (2000). Papers from the 25th Anniversary. University of Massachusetts Occasional Papers (UMOP) 24. Amherst, MA: GLSA Publications.

de Lacy, Paul and Patrik Bye (2000). Edge asymmetries in Phonology and Morphology, In Ji-Yung Kim and Masako Hirotani (eds.) Proceedings of NELS (North-eastern Linguistics Society conference) 30. Amherst, MA: GLSA Publications, pp.121-135.  ROA 328.
[chapter]

 

1999

de Lacy, Paul (1999).  Haplology and correspondence, in Paul de Lacy and Anita Nowak (eds.) Papers from the 25th Anniversary. University of Massachusetts Occasional Papers (UMOP) 24. Amherst, MA: GLSA Publications, pp.51-88.  ROA 298.
[abstract] [chapter]

de Lacy, Paul (1999). Circumscriptive morphemes. In Catherine Kitto and Carolyn Smallwood (eds.) Proceedings of AFLA (Austronesian Formal Linguistics Association) VI. Toronto: Toronto Working Papers in Linguistics, pp.107-120.
ROA 339; http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~twpl/volume16.htm
[abstract] [chapter] [poster]

Kitto, Catherine and Paul de Lacy (1999). Correspondence theory and epenthetic quality. In Catherine Kitto and Carolyn Smallwood (eds.) Proceedings of AFLA (Austronesian Formal Linguistics Association) VI. Toronto: Toronto Working Papers in Linguistics, pp.181-200. ROA 337; http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~twpl/volume16.htm.
[abstract] [chapter] [longer version] [handout]

de Lacy, Paul (1999). A correspondence theory of morpheme order. In Peter Norquest, Jason D. Haugen, and Sonya Bird (eds.) WCCFL (West Coast Conference in Formal Linguistics) XVIII. Arizona: Coyote Working Papers in Linguistics, pp.27-45.  ROA 338.
[abstract] [chapter] [poster]

de Lacy, Paul (1999). Tone and prominence, ROA 333.
[abstract] [article]

 

1998

de Lacy, Paul (1998). A cooccurence restriction in Maori. Te Reo (Journal of the Linguistic Society of New Zealand) 40: 10-44.
[article]

de Lacy, Paul (1998). Sympathetic stress, ROA 294.
[abstract] [article]

de Lacy, Paul (1998). The effect of consonant clusters on vowel duration in American English, ms. University of Massachusetts, Amherst.
[abstract] [article]

de Lacy, Paul (1998). Thematic and structural affinities: The Wanderer and Ecclesiastes. Neophilologus 82.1: 125-137.
[abstract] [article]

 

1997

de Lacy, Paul (1997). Prosodic categorization, MA Thesis, University of Auckland. ROA 236.
[abstract] [thesis]

 

1996

de Lacy, Paul (1996). Circumscription revisited: an analysis of Maori reduplication, ROA 133.
[abstract] [article]

de Lacy, Paul (1996). Christianisation and social adaptation: The Old English Judith. Neuphilologische Mitteilungen (Bulletin of the Modern Language Society) 97.4: 393-410.
[abstract] [article]

 

 

 

 

Contact

 

Paul de Lacy

Associate Professor

Linguistics Department

Rutgers University

18 Seminary Place

New Brunswick

NJ 08901-1108


delacy@rutgers.edu

ph. +1-732-9323399

fax. +1-732-9321370

 

office: Room 303

 

 

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