An Argument for Phonological Stress in French: the syntagm over contrast

IF 0.6 3区 文学 N/A LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS Journal of French Language Studies Pub Date : 2022-01-11 DOI:10.1017/S0959269521000168
Shanti Ulfsbjorninn
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Abstract

Abstract It is standardly assumed that French does not have word-stress, rather it has phrase-level prominence. I will advance a number of arguments, many of which have appeared already in the literature, that cumulatively suggest that French roots are characterized by phonological prominence, even if this is non-contrastive. By prominence, I mean a syntagmatically distributed strength that has all the phonological characteristics of stress in other Romance languages. I will remain agnostic about the nature of that stress, eschewing the lively debate about whether French has feet, and if so what type, and at what level. The structure of the argument is as follows. French demonstrably has phonological word-final strength but one wonders what the source of this strength is. Positionally, the initial position is strong and, independently of cases where it is reinforced by other factors, the final position is weak. I will argue, based on parallels with other Romance languages, that French word-final strength derives from root-final phonological stress. The broader significance of this conclusion is that syntagmatic properties are enough to motivate underlying forms, even in the absence of paradigmatic contrasts (minimal pairs).
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法语语音重音之争:语法与对比
摘要通常认为法语没有单词重音,而是具有短语级别的突出度。我将提出一些论点,其中许多已经出现在文献中,这些论点累积起来表明,法语词根的特征是语音突出,即使这是非对比的。我所说的突出,是指在句法上分布的强度,它具有其他浪漫主义语言中重音的所有语音特征。我将对这种压力的性质保持不可知论,避开关于法国人是否有脚,如果有,是什么类型,在什么水平的激烈辩论。论点的结构如下。法语显然具有音韵学单词的词尾强度,但人们想知道这种强度的来源是什么。从位置上讲,词尾位置很强,与其他因素增强的情况无关,词尾地位很弱。基于与其他浪漫主义语言的相似性,我认为法语单词的词尾强度源于词根词尾的语音重音。这一结论的更广泛意义在于,即使在没有范式对比(最小对)的情况下,组合性质也足以激发潜在的形式。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
16.70%
发文量
37
期刊介绍: Journal of French Language Studies, sponsored by the Association for French Language Studies, encourages and promotes theoretical, descriptive and applied studies of all aspects of the French language. The journal brings together research from the English- and French-speaking traditions, publishing significant work on French phonology, morphology, syntax, lexis and semantics, sociolinguistics and variation studies. Most work is synchronic in orientation, but historical and comparative items are also included. Studies of the acquisition of the French language, where these take due account of current theory in linguistics and applied linguistics, are also published.
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