An account of Old English stress
An analysis of stress patterns in Old English, from the perspective of a framework based on lexicalist metrical phonology, indicates that there was a central Old English stress rule that operated from left-to-right, in contrast to to the central rule for present day English. (46 references) (Author/...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of linguistics 1990-09, Vol.26 (2), p.315-339 |
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container_title | Journal of linguistics |
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creator | McCully, C. B. Hogg, R. M. |
description | An analysis of stress patterns in Old English, from the perspective of a framework based on lexicalist metrical phonology, indicates that there was a central Old English stress rule that operated from left-to-right, in contrast to to the central rule for present day English. (46 references) (Author/CB) |
doi_str_mv | 10.1017/S0022226700014699 |
format | Article |
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B. ; Hogg, R. M.</creator><creatorcontrib>McCully, C. B. ; Hogg, R. M.</creatorcontrib><description>An analysis of stress patterns in Old English, from the perspective of a framework based on lexicalist metrical phonology, indicates that there was a central Old English stress rule that operated from left-to-right, in contrast to to the central rule for present day English. 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source | Jstor Complete Legacy; Cambridge Journals; Periodicals Index Online |
subjects | Consonants Derivational morphology Descriptive studies and applied theories English language Language Patterns Language Planning Lexical stress Linguistics Nouns Old English Philology Phonological stress Phonology Poetic feet Stress Stress (Phonology) Syllables Uncommonly Taught Languages Vowels Words |
title | An account of Old English stress |
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