English
noun plurals: Morphophonemics and stem suppletion
Morphophonemics and stem
suppletion
Morphophonemics refers to
allomorphy which results from regular phonological rules; STEM SUPLETION refers
to irregular inflection.
The
data
Most nouns form their
plural by adding suffix –(e)s, which has three spelling forms: /-z/, /-s/, and
/-iz/.
(1)   a. /boI-z/         boy-s
           /tri:-z/                   tree-s
           /kaʊ-z/        cow-s
       b. /tɔp-s/                   top-s
           /bʊk-s/        books
           /hIp-s/                  hips
        c. /bɔk-iz /      box-es
          /rɔz-iz/          ros-es
          /pIt∫-iz/        peach-es
However, other nouns have
irregular plurals. A few have identical singular and plural forms.
(2)      Singular         Plural
          Sheep           sheep
          Fish              fish
With others, the singular
and plural forms differ in the stem vowel.
(3)      Singular         Plural
          Foot             feet
          Mouse          mice
          Woman         women
          Man              men
With a few, the plural has
a suffix that no other stem in the language has. Some nouns have both an
irregular suffix and a vowel change.
(4)      Singular         plural
          /ɔks/            /
ɔks-Ən/       ox(en)
          /t∫aIld/         /t∫Ild-rƏn/     child(ren)
Other retain the
singular/plural inflection from latin , although this pattern is being
regularized, i.e., some irregular forms have been replaced by regular ones.
(5)      Singular         Plural
          alumnus        alumni
          octopus        octopi           (traditional, irregular form)
                             octppuses     (colloquial, regularized form)
Morphemes
and allomorphs
One
morpheme having several different variants is called its ALLOMORPHS. The
different allomorphs of a morpheme all have the same meaning. However, they are
in  complementary distribution, just like
the allophones of a phoneme; in any given context, only one allomorph of the
morpheme is possible.
       A morpheme is a consistent and unanalyzable
association of phonological, grammatical, and semantic information.
Morphophonemics
There
are several kinds of allomorphy in English noun plurals. The most widespread is
the variation in pronunciation of the regular suffix –(e)s, as illustrated in
(1). We can attribute it to two phonological process;
(6)      a. assimilation in voicing (/z/ à /s/ after a voiceless segment)
b.
insertion of /I/ to break up clusters of alveolar and alveopalatal consonants. 
This
type of allomorphy is called MORPHOPHONEMICS and is considered to be a part of
phonology, since it has to do purely with the interactions of sounds. The two
phonological rules in (6) modify /-z/ to produce the other two variants /-s/
and /-iz/. Together , the three forms /-z/, and /-s/ and /-iz/ are the SURFACE
FORMS for the plural morpheme. Inflectional spellout rule for noun plurals:
      For example, suppose we want to generate
cats, dogs, and roses. The deep structures are as follows:
The rule in (7) applies to
produce (syntactic) surface structure:
These are the input to the phonological
rules, which modify the terminal nodes to produce the correct (phonological)
surface forms.
Morphophonemics
in derivational morphology
      Morphophonemics occurs with both
inflectional and derivational morphology. Let’s look at an example involving
derivation. Consider the pairs of adjectives listed in (11)
(11) a. elegant                             inelegant
          Eligible                    ineligible
          Tolerant                  intolerant
          Direct                     indirect  
        b. possible                impossible
          perfect                             imperfect
          practical                  impractical
          movable                 immovable
        c. correct                  incorrect
          capable                  incapable
        d. legal                     illegal
          legible                    illegible
          legitimate                illegitimate
        e.
reverent                irreverent
          regular                    irregular
          reversible                irreversible
There
are five allomorphs of the same prefix here: /in-/, /im-/, /iŋ-/,  /il-/, / and /ir-/. The variation is
phonologically predictable. If we assume that /in-/ is the underlying form,
then it is easy to explain the other four allomorphs as a case of assimilation
to bilabial  /m/ before a bilabial, to
velar /ŋ/ before a velar, to /I/ before /I/, and to /r/ before /r/.
Phonological
rules then immediately change /in-/ to /im-/ before a bilabial stop, etc., so
that in the lexical entries, we show the different allomorphs of the prefix.
(13)    A
          In[elIgnt]      not elegant
          Im[præktIkl]  not practicle
          Iŋ[korekt]     not correct
          Il[kigl]           not
legal
          Ir[regjƏlƏr]    not regular
Stem
suppletion 
Not
all allomorphic variation is morphophonemics; any that cannot be handled by
regular phonological rules is called SUPPLETION or SUPPLETIVE ALLOMORPHY.
Suppletion is words that have irregular forms in their paradigms. This is called
STEM SUPPLETION. Most of the allomorphy of the English noun plurals discussed
above is of this type, involving irregular patterns of suffixation and vowel
changes.
(14)    N
          fʊt      [- plural]
          fi:t      [+plural]                 foot
          t∫aIld            [-
plural] 
          t∫Ild-rƏn       [+plual]        child
          maʊs  [- plural]
          maIs   [+plural]       mouse
the correct surface form is
inserted directly from the lexicon in deep structure.
Analyzing
allomorphic variation in general
There are three main
factors that distinguish different types of allomorphy:
(38)    a. type of variation: morphophonemics versus suppletion
          b. what varies: stems versus affixes
c.
conditioning environment: lexical (arbitrary) or something else (e.g.,
phonological)
In principle, all three can
vary independently, but usually they combine to produce the following four
types:
                             Type                                Example
| 
Morphomonemics affecting
  stems and/or affixes with phonological conditioning | 
Regular English noun
  plurals English derivational prefix /in-/ | 
| 
Suppletion of stems | 
Irregular English noun plurals | 
| 
Suppletion of affixes,
  phonological conditioning | 
Tzeltal
  possessor agreement | 
| 
Suppletion of affixes,
  lexical conditioning | 
Kiowa
  subject agreement | 
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