textTernary stress patterns—the lapse of more than one syllable between stresses—have been challenging for metrical stress theory. The existence of a ternary primitive predicts the existence of trisyllabic word minima, trisyllabic reduplicants, and most directly, stress on every third syllable. The alternative to a ternary primitive has its own predictions, such as the systematic skipping of one light syllable between metrical feet. As such, this, too, would predict the systematic occurrence of stress on every third syllable. Most of the worlds languages that have stress are binary and show strict alternating rhythm on stressbearing units, and so these ternary languages are somewhat problematic. This research shows that the predict...
One of the pillars of phonological research has been the desirability of representing phonological p...
Though attested in very few languages, ternary rhythm has always occupied the center-stage of resear...
The syllable is a natural unit of organization in spoken language whose strongest cross-linguistic p...
This thesis aims at accounting for ternary rhythmic patterns with the analytic tools provided by met...
Ternary rhythmic systems differ from binary systems in stressing every third syllable in a word, ra...
Published as Coyote Papers: Working Papers in Linguistics from A-ZIntroduction: Ternary stress patte...
textThe human experience is filled with rhythmicity. From coordinated motor movements to memory reco...
This study proposes that metrical constituents are inherently headless and stress is autosegmental. ...
While ternary rhythm exists, ternary feet do not, not even indirectly by means of recursion. We prop...
This dissertation examines the interaction of various phonological phenomena with stress assignment....
This article presents a novel OT analysis of ternary rhythm, using the restrictive format of McCarth...
This article presents a novel OT analysis of ternary rhythm, using the restrictive format of McCarth...
This article presents a reanalysis of the foot-based phonology of Chugach Alutiiq (henceforth CA), a...
Editor's note: The present volume is a slightly revised version of the author's 1993 Ph.D. dissertat...
a. a game; b. phonetics; c. general typology; d. metrical theory: feet; e. metrical theory: the rest...
One of the pillars of phonological research has been the desirability of representing phonological p...
Though attested in very few languages, ternary rhythm has always occupied the center-stage of resear...
The syllable is a natural unit of organization in spoken language whose strongest cross-linguistic p...
This thesis aims at accounting for ternary rhythmic patterns with the analytic tools provided by met...
Ternary rhythmic systems differ from binary systems in stressing every third syllable in a word, ra...
Published as Coyote Papers: Working Papers in Linguistics from A-ZIntroduction: Ternary stress patte...
textThe human experience is filled with rhythmicity. From coordinated motor movements to memory reco...
This study proposes that metrical constituents are inherently headless and stress is autosegmental. ...
While ternary rhythm exists, ternary feet do not, not even indirectly by means of recursion. We prop...
This dissertation examines the interaction of various phonological phenomena with stress assignment....
This article presents a novel OT analysis of ternary rhythm, using the restrictive format of McCarth...
This article presents a novel OT analysis of ternary rhythm, using the restrictive format of McCarth...
This article presents a reanalysis of the foot-based phonology of Chugach Alutiiq (henceforth CA), a...
Editor's note: The present volume is a slightly revised version of the author's 1993 Ph.D. dissertat...
a. a game; b. phonetics; c. general typology; d. metrical theory: feet; e. metrical theory: the rest...
One of the pillars of phonological research has been the desirability of representing phonological p...
Though attested in very few languages, ternary rhythm has always occupied the center-stage of resear...
The syllable is a natural unit of organization in spoken language whose strongest cross-linguistic p...