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Common terms and phrasesadjoined antepenult apply Arab Rule assumed bimoraic binary constituent Booij chapter Closed Syllable Adjunction cluster consonant Crucially cyclic stress derived deweighting diphthongs discussed domain Dutch End Rule English extrametricality feet final stress final syllable foot formal Free Element Condition grid Halle & Vergnaud Hayes heavy syllables Hulst initial pretonic initial syllable Kager Kiparsky level-1 lexical stress lexically marked long vowels maximally medial mora morpheme node non-branching non-final obstruent open syllables penult position preceding primary metrical analysis primary stress primary stress retraction prominence proposed Q-sensitivity restricted Rhythm Rule Rhythmic Adjustment rimes schwa schwallable secondary stress segmental short vowels Sonorant Destressing Sonorant retraction Stray Syllable stress assignment stress placement stress rules stress values stressed syllable stressless syllables Strong retraction suffixes superheavy syllables syllabification syllable weight theory Ticonderoga trade name Trommelen underived words Visch vowel reduction Weak retraction weight distinction word stress word-final word-internal Zonneveld References to this bookFrom other books
From Google ScholarGeneralized AlignmentJohn J McCarthy, Alan S Prince The quantitative trochee in LatinR Armin Mester - 1994 - Natural Language & Linguistic Theory Alternatives to the iambic-trochaic lawRené Kager - 1993 - Natural Language & Linguistic Theory The Acquisition of Stress: A Data-Oriented ApproachWalter Daelemans - Computational Linguistics References from web pagesOptimality and Cumulativity in the Phonology of English Formal properties of metrical structure _uilots-text References Bibliographic information |