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The stress–weight interface in metre

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2017

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Cambridge University Press (CUP)
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Ryan, Kevin M. 2017. “The Stress–weight Interface in Metre.” Phonology 34 (03) (December): 581–613. doi:10.1017/s095267571700029x.

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Meters are typically classified as being accentual (mapping stress, as in English) or quantitative (mapping weight, as in Sanskrit). This article treats the less well-studied typology of hybrid accentual-quantitative meters, which fall into two classes. In the first, stress and weight map independently onto the same meter, as attested in Latin and Old Norse. In the second, stress and weight interact, such that weight is regulated more strictly for stressed than unstressed syllables, as illustrated here by new analyses of Dravidian and Finno-Ugric meters. In both of these latter cases (as well as in SerboCroatian), strictness of weight mapping is modulated gradiently by stress level.

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