Common use of Differences with CORR constraints Clause in Contracts

Differences with CORR constraints. A CORR constraint parses each consonant, and once it finds a consonant X with the desired feature [αf], it parses each other consonant to check whether (i) it also has the desired feature [αf]; (ii) it is in correspondence with X. The most elegant formulation is probably in ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ (2013/2015), reproduced below without the additional restriction on the domain of correspondence, which is irrelevant for the current discussion (other definitions may include more complications, such as the directionality of the relations).

Appears in 2 contracts

Sources: Phonological Agreement Theory, Phonological Agreement Theory

Differences with CORR constraints. A CORR constraint parses each consonant, and once it finds a consonant X with the desired feature [αf], it parses each other consonant to check whether (i) it also has the desired feature [αf]; (ii) it is in correspondence with X. The most elegant formulation is probably in ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ (2013/2015), reproduced below without the additional restriction on the domain of correspondence, which is irrelevant for the current discussion (other definitions may include more complications, such as the directionality of the relations).

Appears in 1 contract

Sources: Phonological Agreement Theory