By using an optimality-theoretic perspective, this paper examines an opaque phonological process in Southwest Saudi Arabic (SSA). The objective of this study is twofold: first, to explain how the second-person singular possessive suffix /k/ is palatalized to the voiceless palato-alveolar fricative ʃ in Southwest Saudi Arabic (SSA); and second, to show how such a velar palatalization process is phonologically conditioned. The alternation is triggered by the presence of a high front vowel /i/ (in the suffix /-ki/), which is subsequently deleted, yielding a surface form with ʃ but no overt trigger. This counterbleeding interaction defies a single-level analysis and necessitates a multi-level derivational account. Within the framework of Optimality Theory (OT), a multi-stratal approach is adopted to model the interaction of markedness and faithfulness constraints that drive both the velar palatalization and the vowel deletion. The study reveals three main findings: first, the analysis successfully captures the opacity of the process by invoking constraint re-ranking across derivational strata, accounting for the palatalized ʃ even after its conditioning environment has been removed. Second, it is analytically accentuated that there is a crucial need for multi-stratal evaluations in OT to handle opaque phonological phenomena. Third, the analysis highlights OT’s explanatory power, showing that an enriched constraint-based approach can accommodate complex interactions like SSA velar palatalization and enrich our understanding of phonological opacity in theory.
Mansour Ibrahim Altamimi (Wed,) studied this question.
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