While classic theories utilize the comparison between cómp[ɛ]nsate going to comp[ə]nsátion and cond[ɛ́]nse going to cond[ɛ]nsátion to argue that stressed vowels are immune to reduction in multiple affixations (e.g., SPE), this paper presents a corpus-based case study that looks into this quantitative interaction between vowel reduction and stress shift during English -ion nominalization and offers discoveries that go against the classic claim. After analyzing 1,047 verb-noun target pairs extracted from the CELEX2 dictionary corpus, this study claims that vowel reduction only partially depends on its stress-bearing feature and that the suffix type, the stress shift pattern, vowel tenseness, and crucially some lexically specific constraints a...
This paper investigated how foreign-accented stress cues affect on-line speech comprehension in Brit...
During the fixed initial-stress period of Latin (sixth to fifth centuries BC), internal open syllabl...
An examination of 92 languages which resolve hiatus through Vowel Elision and/or Coalescence (merger...
International audienceThis paper addresses the issue of underlying representations (URs) from a Guie...
[Abstract] The present paper looks at stress-shifting processes which transformed penultimate stress...
Background/Aims: Evidence from spoken word recognition suggests that for English listeners, distingu...
In American English, word-final [ju:] and [oƱ] in penultimately-stressed words such as value and fol...
Background/Aims: Evidence from spoken word recognition suggests that for English listeners, distingu...
International audienceTesting out 4 parameters: relative frequency, date of appearance, reduced ver...
This study provides an analysis of stress assignment and vowel alternation in the Latinate vocabular...
Languages with binary stress systems frequently tolerate a stress lapse over the final two syllables...
Since English stress is involved with various idiosyncratic patterns, it is very difficult to give a...
International audienceThis paper investigates the relationship between syllable weight and secondary...
Vowel reduction is a prominent feature of American English, as well as other stress-timed languages....
International audienceSummary of stress variation, data consistency between dictionaries, and detail...
This paper investigated how foreign-accented stress cues affect on-line speech comprehension in Brit...
During the fixed initial-stress period of Latin (sixth to fifth centuries BC), internal open syllabl...
An examination of 92 languages which resolve hiatus through Vowel Elision and/or Coalescence (merger...
International audienceThis paper addresses the issue of underlying representations (URs) from a Guie...
[Abstract] The present paper looks at stress-shifting processes which transformed penultimate stress...
Background/Aims: Evidence from spoken word recognition suggests that for English listeners, distingu...
In American English, word-final [ju:] and [oƱ] in penultimately-stressed words such as value and fol...
Background/Aims: Evidence from spoken word recognition suggests that for English listeners, distingu...
International audienceTesting out 4 parameters: relative frequency, date of appearance, reduced ver...
This study provides an analysis of stress assignment and vowel alternation in the Latinate vocabular...
Languages with binary stress systems frequently tolerate a stress lapse over the final two syllables...
Since English stress is involved with various idiosyncratic patterns, it is very difficult to give a...
International audienceThis paper investigates the relationship between syllable weight and secondary...
Vowel reduction is a prominent feature of American English, as well as other stress-timed languages....
International audienceSummary of stress variation, data consistency between dictionaries, and detail...
This paper investigated how foreign-accented stress cues affect on-line speech comprehension in Brit...
During the fixed initial-stress period of Latin (sixth to fifth centuries BC), internal open syllabl...
An examination of 92 languages which resolve hiatus through Vowel Elision and/or Coalescence (merger...