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In words of all sizes, primary stress falls on the right-most heavy syllable, else on final syllable. In words of all sizes, there is no secondary stress.


Bunn, G., and Bunn, R. 1970. Golin phonology. Pacific Linguistics, A23, Canberra: Australian National Univeristy, 1-7.
Excerpt not available.
Bailey, Todd M. 1995. Nonmetrical Constraints on Stress. Doctoral dissertation, Univerisity of Minnesota. Ann Arbor, MI: UMI.
Excerpt not available.
Hayes, Bruce. 1995. Metrical stress theory: Principles and case studies. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
(278) Excerpt not available.
Gordon, Matthew. 2002. A factorial typology of quantity insensitive stress. Natural Language and Linguistic Theory 20. pages 491-552.
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 syllable parameters for this lect.

No syllabic template information for this lect.

No words associated with this lect.