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In words of all sizes, primary stress falls on the final syllable if it is superheavy, else on the penultimate syllable if it has secondary stress, else on the antepenultimate syllable if it has secondary stress, else on the preantepenultimate syllable if it has secondary stress. In words of all sizes, secondary stress falls on all heavy syllables. In sequences of light syllables, secondary stress falls on the even numbered syllables, counting from the right edge of the sequence.


Bailey, Todd M. 1995. Nonmetrical Constraints on Stress. Doctoral dissertation, Univerisity of Minnesota. Ann Arbor, MI: UMI.
Excerpt not available.
Pater, Joe. 1995. "On the nonuniformity of weight-to-stress and stress preservation effects in English." Rutgers Optimality Archive (ROA-107-0000).
Excerpt not available.

No theoretical analysis for this pattern.



Here is the result:

FSA head

fsa_head

FSA tail

fsa_tail

No attributes associated with this lect.

No syllabic template information for this lect.

1986 Hammond, Michael. 1986. The Obligatory Branching Parameter in Metrical Theory. Natural Language and Linguistic Theory 4. 185-228.
1981 Hayes, Bruce. 1981. A metrical theory of stress rules. 1980. Ph.D. thesis, MIT.
  Trommelen M. & W. Zonneveld (forthc.). Dutch. To appear in chapter 8 of H. van der Hulst (ed.) Word Prosodic Systems in the Languages of Europe. Mouton de Gruyter, Berlin.

No words associated with this lect.