Syllable "Sonority" Hierarchy and Pulaar Stress: A Metrical Approach
نویسندگان
چکیده
منابع مشابه
Sonority Based Syllable Segmentation
This paper proposes a new method for detecting syllable boundaries. It is based on the sonority and it uses the so-called Sonority Sequencing Principle for the boundary detection. As acoustic correlate of the phonological concept of sonority we use the regularities present in the spectrogram of the signal. By finding the maxima of the sonority function we will be finding the syllable nuclei, wh...
متن کاملsonority hierarchy principle in cvcc syllable of persian
in persian, the only syllable type with consonant clusters is cvcc, where its coda can be filled with two consonants. the present article attempts to find whether these two consonant conform the sonority sequencing principle or not. for this reason, the persian words with cvcc syllable type are gathered from persian dictionaries and are classified based on the vowel filling the nucleus of the s...
متن کاملSyllable-internal structure and the sonority hierarchy: differential evidence from lexical decision, naming, and reading.
Treiman (1983) and others have argued that spoken syllables are best characterized not as linear strings of phonemes, but as hierarchically organized units consisting of an onset (initial consonant or consonant cluster) and a rime (the vowel and any following consonants) and that the rime is further divided into a peak or nucleus (the vowel) and a coda (the final consonants). It has also been a...
متن کاملReconstructing the Sonority Hierarchy
Combinations of segments in a language are subject to co-occurrence restrictions. This paper focuses on phonotactic constraints that govern the formation of word-initial consonant clusters in German. A description of the inventory of clusters results in scales of phonotactic preferability and a novel approach to a ranking of onset clusters. A set of structural preferences for clusters can be es...
متن کاملThe Sonority Hierarchy in Hungarian
Of course, if (2) holds, (1) and (3) are equivalent – but there might well be languages where (2) turns out to be false, but the other two statements are true. In fact, every language where consonant clusters are disallowed as codas but permitted as onsets is a counterexample to (2), and the same holds for those languages that allow complex codas but do not allow complex onsets. Before turning ...
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ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics
سال: 1995
ISSN: 1043-3805
DOI: 10.17161/kwpl.1808.447