Headmost Accent Wins: Head Dominance and Ideal Prosodic Form in Lexical Accent Systems |
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
A Typology of Stress Systems | 11 |
Factorial Typology of Stress Systems | 31 |
Copyright | |
12 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
accentual patterns ALIGN-R analysis antepenultimate stress attract stress bimoraic candidate Chapter clitic Cupeño cyclic default derivational suffix derived words ER-R examples extrametricality FAITH(HEAD faithfulness constraints final stress floating accent FLOP foot FTBIN full vowel fusional languages grammar grave accent Greek Greek and Russian head dominance head-dependent headedness HEADFAITH HEADSTRESS HIERAL inflectional suffix InflS inherent accent inherent accentual properties input leftmost lexical accent systems lexical marking lexical stress lexical suffix Lillooet Linguistics loan words marked morphemes marked words markedness markers morphological heads morphological structure Moses-Columbia NOM.pl NOM.sg non-head nouns Optimality Theory Oropos output paradigm parsing penultimate phonological polysynthetic languages position pre-accenting predictable primary stress prosodic compositionality prosodic faithfulness prosodic shape prosodic structure prosodic word ranking rightmost Salish languages schwa specifically stress pattern structural constraints syntactic syntactic category tableau templatic Thompson trochaic TROCHEE unaccentable roots underlying representations unmarked roots violation vocalic peak vowel reduction weak accent σό-σ