Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
935534 Lingua 2012 28 Pages PDF
Abstract

In this article, I will show that, despite its wide use, the term ‘stress’ is too ambiguous and therefore must be replaced by a set of other terms that together cover the various usages of ‘stress’. Firstly, we need to be able to distinguish between the formal representation of ‘stress’ and the correlates of ‘stress’. Within the formal representation of ‘stress’ I will show that we have to separate four notions: accent, edge prominence (EP), rhythm and weight. Accordingly, we also need to reckon with potentially different correlates. Here, I will use stress as a general label for phonetic correlates and distinguish stressA, stressEP, stressR and stressW. The article will then mainly focus on accent and its correlates. I will first propose central parts of a theory of accent. Then, I will address the question as to whether we need to single out pitch (or tone) as a special correlate of accent, i.e. one that is not included in the correlate stressA, which would entail a currently controversial distinction between what is traditionally called stress-accent and pitch-accent. The article concludes with a discussion of refinements, problems and extensions of the accentual system proposed here (including the deconstructing of ‘tone’).

► This article present a theory of word accent. ► This article decomposed the notion ‘word stress’ into various independent parts. ► This article separates the formal representation of accent from its phonetic correlates ► This article separate the formal analysis of accent and rhythm.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Arts and Humanities Language and Linguistics
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