The Groundwork of English Stress |
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Page 11
... kinetic stress , while the second element , because it follows the kinetic tone , cannot take a high level stress in ... takes the kinetic tone and the latter a partial stress . Diagram ( h ) shows the pattern that results when the ...
... kinetic stress , while the second element , because it follows the kinetic tone , cannot take a high level stress in ... takes the kinetic tone and the latter a partial stress . Diagram ( h ) shows the pattern that results when the ...
Page 32
... takes a kinetic stress . The list ( given in ยง 20 ) is confined to words where the prefix has the force of a conjunction , adverb or adjective and has in- sufficient individuality to be classed as a Greek - type element ( for which see ...
... takes a kinetic stress . The list ( given in ยง 20 ) is confined to words where the prefix has the force of a conjunction , adverb or adjective and has in- sufficient individuality to be classed as a Greek - type element ( for which see ...
Page 195
... take a post - kinetic partial stress on the second component , as this , though not important enough to take the kinetic stress , is sufficiently so to be given some prominence . In the case where the semantic homogeneity of the ...
... take a post - kinetic partial stress on the second component , as this , though not important enough to take the kinetic stress , is sufficiently so to be given some prominence . In the case where the semantic homogeneity of the ...
Contents
THE TWO KINDS OF TONE | 1 |
INTERDEPENDENCE OF STRESS AND TONE | 3 |
THE THREE ESSENTIAL STRESSMARKS | 4 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
action added adjective adverb American attributive Britain British cause cent collocations combination compounds consonant contain culture dialects differences disyllabic divided double double-stressed elements English English-type compounds established examples exceptions falls final five foreign four syllables frequently function gerund give given Greek-type hand head high level importance included indicated influence initial intonation kinetic stress kinetic tone language late latter lexical marked meaning ment monosyllabic names naturally nearly normal Note noticed noun object occur origin partial stress pattern pitch position possible post-kinetic stress pre-kinetic stress preceded prefix present pronounced pronunciation referred Romanic root rule second component second syllable semantic separate shown similar Similarly single single-stressed speech static Stress-pattern strong suffix takes the kinetic third three syllables tile tive unstressed usually verb vowel word stress Words of three