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In all words, secondary stress occurs on on all heavy syllables which are located to the left of the main stress. In sequences of light syllables which are located to the left of the main stress, secondary stress falls on the odd numbered syllables, counting from the left edge of the sequence.


Brame, Michael. 1973. On Stress Assignment in Two Arabic Dialects. In Stephen R. Anderson and Paul Kip[arsky, eds. A Festschrift for Morris Halle. Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, New York. pp 14-25.
Excerpt not available.
Brame, Michael. 1974. The Cycle in Phonology: Stress in Palestinean, Maltese and Spanish. Linguistic Inquiry 5. 39-60.
Excerpt not available.
Kenstowicz. 1981. The Metrical Structure of Arabic Accent. Paper delivered at the UCLA-USC conference on Nonlinear Phonology, LakeArrowhead, Calif.
Excerpt not available.
Kenstowicz, Michael. 1983. Parametric Variation and Accent in the Arabic Dialects. Chicago Linguistic Society 19, 205-213.
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.
(126) Excerpt not available.

No theoretical analysis for this pattern.

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.