Browse — Lect
ReturnLect:
latitude,longitude:
Pattern:
In words of all sizes, primary stress falls on the initial syllable. In words of all sizes, secondary stress falls iteratively on odd numbered syllables, counting from the right.
- Kakumasu, James. 1986. Urubu-Kaapor. In Derbyshire, Desmond and Pullum, Geoffrey, eds. Handbook of Amazonian languages, vol. 1, pp. 326-406. New York: Mouton.
- 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.
type:
quantity-insensitive (qi)
subtype:
binary
No theoretical analysis for this pattern.
Here is the result:
FSA head
FSA tail
No attributes associated with this lect.
closed_syll:
yes
syllable_template:
seems (C)V(C)
any
weight:
0
2002
Gordon, Matthew. 2002. A factorial typology of quantity insensitive stress. Natural Language and Linguistic Theory 20. pages 491-552.
1986
Kakumasu, James. (1986). Urubu-Kaapor. In Desmond C. Derbyshire and Geoffrey K. Pullum, ed., Handbook of Amazonian Languages 1, pp. 326-403. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
taˈta
fire
miˈřa
tree
ˌwařuˈwa
glass, mirror
ˌuřuˈmã
duck
miˌřaˈke
tree.foc
nuˌpãˈta
he will hit
miˌřařaˈʔir
small tree