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In words of three or more syllables, primary stress falls on the antepenultimate syllable. In words of two or fewer syllables, primary stress falls on the initial syllable. In words of all sizes, there is no secondary stress.


Collier, Ken and Collier, Margaret. 1975. A tentative phonemic statement of the Apozedialect, Kela language. In Loving, Richard, ed. Phonologies of Five Austronesian Languages, pp. 129-61. Ukarumpa: Summer Institute of Linguistics.
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.
(205) 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.