Stress in the Absence of Morphological Conditioning: An Experimental Investigation of Stress in Greek Acronyms

IF 0.5 0 LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS Journal of Greek Linguistics Pub Date : 2015-01-01 DOI:10.1163/15699846-01502003
Anthi Revithiadou, Kalomoira Nikolou, Despina Papadopoulou
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Greek is a morphology-dependent stress system, where stress is lexically specified for a number of individual morphemes (e.g., roots and suffixes). In the absence of lexically encoded stress, a default stress emerges. Most theoretical analyses of Greek stress that assume antepenultimate stress to represent the default (e.g., Malikouti-Drachman & Drachman 1989; Ralli & Touratzidis 1992; Revithiadou 1999) are not independently confirmed by experimental studies (e.g., Protopapas et al. 2006; Apostolouda 2012; Topintzi & Kainada 2012; Revithiadou & Lengeris in press). Here, we explore the nature of the default stress in Greek with regard to acronyms , given their lack of overt morphology and fixed stress pattern, with a goal of exploring how stress patterns are shaped when morphological information (encapsulated in the inflectional ending) is suppressed. For this purpose, we conducted two production (reading aloud) experiments, which revealed, for our consultants, first, an almost complete lack of antepenultimate stress and, second, a split between penultimate and final stress dependent on acronym length, the type of the final segment and the syllable type of the penultimate syllable. We found two predominant correspondences: (a) consonant-final acronyms and end stress and (b) vowel-final acronyms and the inflected word the vowel represents, the effect being that stress patterns for acronyms are linked to the inflected words they represent only if enough morphonological information about the acronym’s segments is available to create familiarity effects. Otherwise, we find a tendency for speakers to prefer stress at stem edges.
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没有形态条件作用下的重音:希腊首字母缩略词重音的实验研究
希腊语是一种依赖词法的重音系统,它的重音在词汇上被指定为一些单独的语素(例如,词根和后缀)。在没有词法上编码的重音的情况下,出现了默认重音。大多数关于希腊压力的理论分析都假设倒数第一压力代表违约(例如,Malikouti-Drachman & Drachman 1989;Ralli & Touratzidis 1992;revthiadou 1999)没有得到实验研究的独立证实(例如,Protopapas等人,2006;Apostolouda 2012;Topintzi & Kainada 2012;revthiadou & Lengeris出版)。在这里,我们探讨了希腊首字母缩略词中默认重音的本质,考虑到它们缺乏明显的形态和固定的重音模式,目的是探索当形态信息(封装在屈折结尾)被抑制时,重音模式是如何形成的。为此,我们进行了两个生产(大声朗读)实验,向我们的顾问揭示,首先,几乎完全没有倒数第二个重音,其次,倒数第二个和最后一个重音之间的分裂取决于首字母缩略词的长度,最后一个音节的类型和倒数第二个音节的音节类型。我们发现了两种主要的对应关系:(a)辅音-尾音首字母缩略词和结尾重音;(b)元音-尾音首字母缩略词和元音所代表的屈折单词,其效果是,只有当有关首字母缩略词片段的足够形态学信息可用时,首字母缩略词的重音模式才能与它们所代表的屈折单词联系起来,从而产生熟悉效应。否则,我们发现说话者倾向于在词干边缘重读。
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来源期刊
Journal of Greek Linguistics
Journal of Greek Linguistics LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS-
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
1
审稿时长
42 weeks
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