Word Prominence in Languages with Complex Morphologies

Author:   Ksenia Bogomolets (Professional Teaching Fellow, School of Cultures, Languages, and Linguistics, Professional Teaching Fellow, School of Cultures, Languages, and Linguistics, University of Auckland) ,  Harry van der Hulst (Professor, Department of Linguistics, Professor, Department of Linguistics, University of Connecticut)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
ISBN:  

9780198840589


Pages:   720
Publication Date:   23 March 2023
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
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Word Prominence in Languages with Complex Morphologies


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Author:   Ksenia Bogomolets (Professional Teaching Fellow, School of Cultures, Languages, and Linguistics, Professional Teaching Fellow, School of Cultures, Languages, and Linguistics, University of Auckland) ,  Harry van der Hulst (Professor, Department of Linguistics, Professor, Department of Linguistics, University of Connecticut)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
Imprint:   Oxford University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 16.50cm , Height: 4.50cm , Length: 24.00cm
Weight:   0.001kg
ISBN:  

9780198840589


ISBN 10:   0198840586
Pages:   720
Publication Date:   23 March 2023
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

List of abbreviations The contributors Part I: Theoretical issues in word prominence 1: Ksenia Bogomolets and Harry van der Hulst: Word prominence and polysynthetic languages 2: Alana Johns: Polysynthetic words 3: Matthew K. Gordon: Word stress and intonational prominence in highly synthetic languages Part II: Word prominence in North American languages 4: Keren Rice: Domains of prominence in polysynthetic languages of North America 5: Anja Arnhold, Emily Elfner, and Richard Compton: Inuktitut and the concept of word-level prominence 6: James A. Crippen, Rose-Marie Déchaine, and Emily Elfner: Tlingit (anti-) prominence 7: Ksenia Bogomolets: Accent and tone in Arapaho 8: Eugene Buckley: M-words, P-words, and accent phrases in Kashaya 9: Matthew K. Gordon and Jack B. Martin: Prominence in Muskogean languages Part III: Word prominence in South American languages 10: Benjamin Molineaux: A reassessment of word prominence in Mapudungun: Phonological vs morphological activation 11: Elena I. Mihas and Olga Maxwell: Satipo Ashaninka word- and phrase-level prominence 12: Nicholas Rolle: Polysynthesis, stress uniformity, and the opposite-to-anchor stress system in Ese Ejja Part IV: Word prominence in Australian languages 13: John Mansfield: The prosodic structure of Australian polysynthetic verbs: Bininj Gun-Wok, Murrinpatha, and Ngalakgan Part V: Word prominence in languages of Europe and Asia 14: Johanna Mattissen: Phonological and morphological wordhood in Nivkh 15: Matthew K. Gordon and Ayla B. Applebaum: Prominence in Circassian 16: Öner Özçelik: Prosody in Turkish 17: Kristine A. Hildebrandt and Gregory D. S. Anderson: Word prominence in languages of Southern Asia 18: Harry van der Hulst: A unified account of phonological and morphological accent References Index

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Author Information

Ksenia Bogomolets is Professional Teaching Fellow at the University of Auckland, New Zealand. She specializes in phonology and morphology, with a particular focus on the phonology of stress in polysynthetic languages. She is especially interested in theoretical issues pertaining to morpho-phonology of Algonquian languages, but she has also investigated stress and its interactions with morphology in unrelated highly synthetic languages such as Nez Perce, Ichishkiin Sinwit, and Choguita Rarámuri. On the empirical side, she has a keen interest in documentation of understudied and endangered languages. Harry van der Hulst is Professor of Linguistics at the University of Connecticut. His research interests include stress, syllabic structure, segmental structure, sign language, gesture, language evolution, and phonological acquisition, and he is both Editor-in-Chief of The Linguistic Review and co-editor of Mouton de Gruyter's series 'Studies in Generative Grammar'. His many books include Asymmetries in Vowel Harmony(OUP, 2018), Radical CV Phonology: A Theory of Segmental and Syllabic Structure (Edinburgh University Press, 2020), and The Oxford History of Phonology (co-edited with B. Elan Dresher; OUP, 2022).

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