Lexical Accent in Cupeño, Hittite, and Indo-European

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University of California Dissertation

Author(s): Anthony David Yates
Year: 2017

Language: English
Pages: 241

Introduction......Page 15
On ``stress'' and ``accent''......Page 18
Fixed stress systems......Page 21
Lexical accent systems......Page 24
Analyzing lexical accent systems......Page 29
LA in Optimality Theory......Page 30
The Basic Accentuation Principle in OT......Page 33
Accentual dominance & morphological headedness in OT......Page 39
Cupeno, Cupan & Uto-Aztecan......Page 43
The Cupenos and the Cupeño corpus......Page 44
Phonological sketch of Cupeño......Page 45
The evidence for Cupeño word stress......Page 46
Hittite, Anatolian & Indo-European......Page 47
The Hittites and the Hittite corpus......Page 50
Phonological sketch of Hittite......Page 52
The evidence for Hittite word stress......Page 54
Introduction......Page 55
Lexical accent in Cupeño......Page 57
Stress and vowel length in Cupeño......Page 66
Implementing the BAP in Cupeño......Page 68
Stress assignment in Cupeño......Page 69
Agreement prefixes & the Basic Accentuation Principle......Page 74
Agreement prefixes are not accented......Page 75
ds markers do not show ``rightmost wins''......Page 76
Leftmost preaccenting suffix wins......Page 78
Leftmost wins & the aan-suffix......Page 79
Leftmost wins & the ``nominalizer'' suffix......Page 80
Reduplication & the Basic Accentuation Principle......Page 82
Cupeño stress in typological perspective......Page 84
Toward a restrictive typology of lexical accent......Page 85
On the relationship between plene writing & vowel length......Page 86
long plene......Page 87
plene long......Page 89
On the relationship between vowel length & word stress......Page 91
stressed long......Page 93
long stressed......Page 103
Vowel reduction & word stress......Page 112
On the phonetic realization of word stress......Page 115
Toward an analysis of Hittite word stress......Page 117
Evidence for Hittite word stress......Page 120
Hittite stress in IE and typological perspective......Page 121
Stress is culminative, obligatory......Page 122
Stress is free......Page 124
Stress is unbounded......Page 125
Stress is morphology-dependent, accent-conditioned......Page 127
Lexical accent in Hittite......Page 129
Verbal inflection in Hittite......Page 130
Stress (im)mobility in radical verb inflection......Page 132
Radical verbs with mobile stress......Page 133
Radical verbs with fixed stress......Page 138
Imperfective & participle formation in Hittite......Page 140
Stress in imperfectives & participles of mobile radical verbs......Page 143
Stress in imperfectives & participles of fixed radical verbs......Page 145
Fixed and mobile stress as cross-categorical asymmetry......Page 146
Components of the analysis......Page 147
Deriving mobile stress......Page 149
Deriving fixed stress......Page 155
Leftmost wins in imperfectives & participles......Page 156
Fixed stress in derived verbal stems......Page 160
Synchronic status of the BAP?......Page 163
Local summary: Lexical accent in Hittite & the BAP......Page 164
Accented derivational suffixes......Page 166
Derivational suffixes in non-primary derivation......Page 168
Derivation, dominance, and the evidence for word stress......Page 172
Derivation & morphological headedness in Hittite......Page 175
Head faithfulness & word stress in derivation......Page 178
Conclusions & discussion......Page 182
Reconstructing PA stress assignment......Page 184
Inflectional stress in Palaic & PA......Page 185
HeadFaith in Luwian & PA......Page 188
Reconstructing PIE stress assignment......Page 191
PIE stress assignment & the BAP......Page 192
Vedic Sanskrit ``Class II'' presents & the BAP......Page 193
PIE root presents & the BAP......Page 197
On the accentedness of PIE verbal roots......Page 200
PIE nominal inflectional & the BAP......Page 203
PIE stress assignment & morphological headedness......Page 210
Conclusions & discussion......Page 212
Bibliography......Page 215