Uspanteko (Guatemala; ∼2000 speakers) is an endangered K’ichean-branch Mayan language. It is unique among the K’ichean languages in having innovated a system of contrastive pitch accent, which operates alongside a separate system of non-contrastive stress. The prosody of Uspanteko is of general typological interest, given the relative scarcity of ‘mixed’ languages employing both stress and lexical pitch. Drawing from a descriptive grammar and from our own fieldwork, we also document some intricate interactions between pitch accent and other aspects of the phonology (stress placement, vowel length, vowel quality, and two deletion processes). While pitch accent is closely tied to morphology, the location of lexical tone is entirely a matter o...
Uspanteko is a Mayan language spoken in and around the municipality of Uspantán (Tz’unun Kaab’) in ...
In languages with fixed stress towards the left or right edge of the word, stress is often used for ...
Abstract: This analysis considers for the first time the existence of interactions between pitch, s...
In Uspanteko, a Mayan language spoken in Guatemala, certain possessive prefixes lead to variation in...
Yucatec Maya (YM) is an indigenous language of Mexico that features both phonemic tonal distinctions...
The Yakima dialect of Sahaptin has been described as a pitch accent language, but lately the categor...
Kashaya, an endangered Pomoan language of northern California, has an iambic stress pattern, assigne...
This paper presents the results of a phonological study of primary stress in Wichí, a Mataguayan lan...
This paper presents an analysis of the stress system in the Nahualá dialect of K’ichee’ (a Mayan lan...
types and Stress. This is exceptional from a typological viewpoint, as most languages have at most t...
This dissertation presents a phonological description and acoustic analysis of the word prosody of I...
The analysis of systems of tone, stress, and intonation in the world's languages is a\ud center of d...
This paper proposes that Northern Tepehuan is a tonal language with just one lexical tone \u27low to...
Although stress systems and tonal systems have each been objects of prolonged linguistic study, and ...
This papers presents an exploration of the vowel inventory and patterns of stress and vowel deletion...
Uspanteko is a Mayan language spoken in and around the municipality of Uspantán (Tz’unun Kaab’) in ...
In languages with fixed stress towards the left or right edge of the word, stress is often used for ...
Abstract: This analysis considers for the first time the existence of interactions between pitch, s...
In Uspanteko, a Mayan language spoken in Guatemala, certain possessive prefixes lead to variation in...
Yucatec Maya (YM) is an indigenous language of Mexico that features both phonemic tonal distinctions...
The Yakima dialect of Sahaptin has been described as a pitch accent language, but lately the categor...
Kashaya, an endangered Pomoan language of northern California, has an iambic stress pattern, assigne...
This paper presents the results of a phonological study of primary stress in Wichí, a Mataguayan lan...
This paper presents an analysis of the stress system in the Nahualá dialect of K’ichee’ (a Mayan lan...
types and Stress. This is exceptional from a typological viewpoint, as most languages have at most t...
This dissertation presents a phonological description and acoustic analysis of the word prosody of I...
The analysis of systems of tone, stress, and intonation in the world's languages is a\ud center of d...
This paper proposes that Northern Tepehuan is a tonal language with just one lexical tone \u27low to...
Although stress systems and tonal systems have each been objects of prolonged linguistic study, and ...
This papers presents an exploration of the vowel inventory and patterns of stress and vowel deletion...
Uspanteko is a Mayan language spoken in and around the municipality of Uspantán (Tz’unun Kaab’) in ...
In languages with fixed stress towards the left or right edge of the word, stress is often used for ...
Abstract: This analysis considers for the first time the existence of interactions between pitch, s...