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
Hauptverfasser: McCully, C. B., Hogg, R. M.
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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
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ispartof Journal of linguistics, 1990-09, Vol.26 (2), p.315-339
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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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