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E-raamat: Study of Word Stress and Accent: Theories, Methods and Data

Edited by (Stony Brook University, State University of New York), Edited by (University of Connecticut), Edited by (Universiteit Leiden)
  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 06-Dec-2018
  • Kirjastus: Cambridge University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781316732434
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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 06-Dec-2018
  • Kirjastus: Cambridge University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781316732434
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"The Study of Word Stress and Accent Theories, Methods and Data Stress and accent are central, organizing features of grammar, but their precise nature continues to be a source of mystery and wonder. These issues come to the forefront in the phonetic manifestation of stress and accent, their cross-linguistic variation and the subtle and intricate laws they obey in individual languages. Understanding the nature of stress and accent systems informs all aspects of linguistic theory, methods, typology and especially the grammatical analysis of language data. These themes form the organizational backbone of this book. Bringing together a team of world-renowned phonologists, the volume covers a range of typological and theoretical issues in the study of stressand accent. It will appeal to researchers who value synergistic approaches to the study of stress and accent, careful attention to cross-linguistic variation, and detailed analyses of both well-studied and understudied languages. The book is a lively testimony of a field of inquiry that shows progress, while also identifying questions for ongoing research"--

Arvustused

' this book is worth reading as a highly welcome supplement to a field whose studies renew our knowledge, provide new insights and solutions to current theoretical challenges, and open doors to future research. It will be of interest to a wide-ranging audience of theoretical phonologists and scholars working on the intersection of optimality theory and phonological acquisition.' Asmaa Shehata, LINGUIST List 33.2007

Muu info

Explores the nature of stress and accent patterns in natural language using a diverse range of theories, methods and data.
List of Figures
vii
List of Tables
ix
List of Contributors
xi
Introduction 1(14)
Rob Goedemans
Jeffrey Heinz
Harry Van Der Hulst
Part I Phonetic Correlates and Prominence Distinctions
1 Acoustic Correlates and Perceptual Cues of Word and Sentence Stress: Towards a Cross-Linguistic Perspective
15(45)
Vincent J. Van Heuven
2 Positional Prominence versus Word Accent: Is There a Difference?
60(16)
Larry M. Hyman
3 Explaining Word-Final Stress Lapse
76(26)
Anya Lunden
4 What Danish and Estonian Can Show to a Modern Word-Prosodic Typology
102(45)
Natalia Kuznetsova
Part II Typology
5 Mora and Syllable Accentuation: Typology and Representation
147(40)
Rene Kager
Violeta Martinez-Paricio
6 Word Stress, Pitch Accent, and Word Order Typology with Special Reference to Altaic
187(40)
Hisao Tokizaki
Part III Case Studies
7 Persistence and Change in Stem Prominence in Dene (Athabaskan) Languages
227(29)
Keren Rice
8 Spanish Word Stress: An Updated Multidimensional Account
256(37)
Iggy Roca
9 Metrically Conditioned Pitch Accent in Uspanteko
293(30)
Bjorn Kohnlein
10 Focus Prosody in Kagoshima Japanese
323(23)
Haruo Kubozono
11 Where Is the Dutch Stress System? Some New Data
346(15)
Bjorn Kohnlein
Marc Van Oostendorp
12 Morphologically Assigned Accent and an Initial Three-Syllable Window in Ese'eja
361(26)
Nicholas Rolle
Marine Vuillermet
13 The Scales-and-Parameters Approach to Morpheme-Specific Exceptions in Accent Assignment
387(38)
Alexandre Vaxman
Language Index 425(3)
Subject Index 428
Rob Goedemans is Information Manager in the Humanities Faculty of Universiteit Leiden. His research focusses on phonetics, phonology and typology of stress in the languages of the world in general, and the languages of Aboriginal Australia and Indonesia in particular. Together with Harry van der Hulst, he has worked on several publications based on the StressTyp database, with which he has been involved since its inception. Jeffrey Heinz is Professor in the Department of Linguistics and the Institute of Advanced Computational Science at Stony Brook University. He conducts research at the intersection of theoretical linguistics, theoretical computer science, and computational learning theory. With Rob Goedemans and Harry van der Hulst, he helped develop the StressTyp2 database, which organizes and presents information on the stress and accent patterns in hundreds of languages around the world. Harry van der Hulst is Professor of Linguistics at the University of Connecticut. He specializes in phonology, which is the study of the sounds systems of languages, as well as the visual aspects of sign languages. He has published 25 books and over 130 articles and has been Editor-in-Chief of the international linguistic journal The Linguistic Review since 1990. With Rob Goedemans and Jeff Heinz he helped develop the StressTyp2 database, which organizes and presents information on the stress and accent patterns in hundreds of languages around the world.