To What Extent is Word Stress Predictable in English - David Stehling - 書籍 - Grin Publishing - 9783656327134 - 2012年12月5日
カバー画像とタイトルが一致しない場合、正しいのはタイトルです

To What Extent is Word Stress Predictable in English

価格
¥ 2.879
税抜

遠隔倉庫からの取り寄せ

発送予定日 2026年1月5日 - 2026年1月15日
クリスマスプレゼントは1月31日まで返品可能です
iMusicのウィッシュリストに追加

Seminar paper from the year 2009 in the subject English Language and Literature Studies - Linguistics, grade: A, University of Wales, Bangor, course: Phonology, language: English, abstract: In many languages word stress is quite predictable: in Czech the first syllable of a word always carries the main stress. In French the ultimate syllable is the most prominent each time. The penultimate syllable is constantly stressed in Polish. As can be seen, there are strict general rules with respect to a word's stress. In English, however, the stressing of a lexeme appears to be arbitrary rather than following certain stress rules. The spelling does not indicate a word's pronunciation, let alone its stress. Moreover, the stress may even differ within the same word. Thus, thir'teen can be stressed on the last syllable, but in an environment of another word, e.g. 'thirteen 'pints, it can also be pronounced with a prominent first syllable in order to keep eurhythmy. Nevertheless, it looks like native speakers have a perceptual ability to say how many syllables a word has and to tell which syllable receives the most stress. Therefore, Carr (1999) considers three trisyllabic non-English words: Gigondas, Zaventem and tavola. The author points out that English speakers always tend to stress the penultimate syllable mispronouncing each of theses words. Why do speakers with English as their mother tongue react in this way? Is this a proof of generalisation and existing stress patterns? In this essay it is discussed whether the primary stress of singular words has to be learned, e.g. like their spelling or the sequence of their phonemes, or if the stressing of a lexeme follows internalized rules (due to a lack of space, secondary stress shall be excluded here). For a more concise analysis of the issue, three main bases concerning primary stress patterns are examined: the syntactic, morphological and phonological information of a word.


16 pages

メディア 書籍     Paperback Book   (ソフトカバーで背表紙を接着した本)
リリース済み 2012年12月5日
ISBN13 9783656327134
出版社 Grin Publishing
ページ数 16
寸法 178 × 254 × 1 mm   ·   40 g
言語 ドイツ語  

David Stehlingの他の作品を見る

すべて表示