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Strati cation without morphological strata, syllable counting without counts - modelling English stress assignment with Naive Discriminative Learning ...
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Stress in the Family: Reconsidering Stress Preservation in English -ory Adjectives ...
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Abstract:
Descriptions of English morphophonology traditionally make a distinction between stress-preserving and stress-shifting affixes. Stress in words with stress-shifting affixes is often assumed to be an effect of stress rules. Words with stress-preserving suffixes, by contrast, preserve the stress of their bases. In most accounts the notion of 'stress preservation' relies on two basic theoretical assumptions about the nature of phonology-morphology interaction: One is that there is a clear base from which stress can be preserved. The other is that stress is computed online, i.e. is not stored. Both assumptions are contested in the literature, in particular by accounts that assume that morphophonology is also influenced by paradigmatic relations in the lexicon (e.g. Collie 2008, Stanton & Steriade 2014). The present paper is concerned with adjectives affixed with ory, a suffix that has been notoriously problematic for both the dichotomy of stress-preserving and stress-shifting suffixes, and for the idea that ...
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Keyword:
150; linguistics; morpho-phonology; paradigms; word stress
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URL: https://dx.doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.5000 https://www.psycharchives.org/handle/20.500.12034/4428
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Secondary stress and morphological structure - new evidence from dictionary and speech data
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In: 18ème Internation Morphology Meeting ; https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-02083546 ; 18ème Internation Morphology Meeting, May 2018, Budapest, Hungary (2018)
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English compound stress in an analogical model of word formation
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