@article{oai:k-junshin.repo.nii.ac.jp:00000269, author = {小田, 智代 and オダ, トモヨ and Oda, Tomoyo}, journal = {研究紀要}, month = {Mar}, note = {P(論文), Compensatory Lengthening (henceforth CL) occurs when a segment is deleted for some reason, the nearby segment is lengthened to compensate for deletion. In this paper, we will discuss three different patterns of CL in several dialects of Ancient Greek: Lesbian and Tessalian, East Ionic and Attic. We will attempt to account for the different CL patterns some consonants as moraic underlyingly. Moreover, we shall illustrate these different CL patterns with reranking some relevant constraints within the framework of Optimality Theory proposed in Prince and Smolensky (1993). In addition, we shall discuss that historical changes in Ancient Greek can be also accounted for in terms of changes of ranking constraints.}, pages = {135--152}, title = {Compensatory Lengthening in Ancient Greek}, volume = {30}, year = {2000} }