The Study of Word Stress and Accent
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 stress and 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 analyzes 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.
- Provides careful analysis of popular as well as understudied languages including Athabaskan, Slovak, Uspanteko, Japanese, and Ese'eja languages
- Includes theoretical and typological analysis of how stress and accent systems vary cross-linguistically
- This book is ideal for researchers who value integrative methods in the study of natural languages
Reviews & endorsements
'… 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
Product details
December 2018Hardback
9781107164031
440 pages
235 × 158 × 27 mm
0.75kg
63 b/w illus. 31 tables
Available
Table of Contents
- Part I. Phonetic Correlates and Prominence Distinctions:
- 1. Acoustic correlates and perceptual cues of word and sentence stress: towards a cross-linguistic perspective Vincent van Heuven
- 2. Positional prominence vs. word accent: is there a difference? Larry Hyman
- 3. Explaining word-final stress lapse Anya Lunden
- 4. What Danish and Estonian can show to a modern word-prosodic typology Natalia Kuznetsova
- Part II. Typology:
- 5. Mora and syllable accentuation – typology and representation Rene Kager and Violeta Martinez-Paricio
- 6. Word stress, pitch accent and word order typology – with special reference to Altaic Hisao Tokizaki
- Part III. Case Studies:
- 7. Persistence and change in stem prominence in Dene (Athabaskan) languages Keren Rice
- 8. Spanish word stress: an updated multidimensional account Iggy Roca
- 9. Metrically conditioned pitch accent in Uspanteko Bjorn Kohnlein
- 10. Focus prosody in Kagoshima Japanese Haruo Kubozono
- 11. Where is the Dutch stress system? Some new data Marc van Oostendorp and Bjorn Kohnlein
- 12. Morphologically assigned accent and an initial three-syllable window in Ese'eja Nicholas Rolle and Marine Vuilleremet
- 13. The scales-and-parameters approach to morpheme-specific exceptions in accent assignment Alexandre Vaxman.