Exceptionality in Spanish Stress

Stress in vowel-final non-verbs in Spanish regularly falls on the penultimate syllable, while stress in consonant-final words regularly falls on the final syllable. There are two main classes of exceptions to this regularity: stress on the syllable preceding the regular one, and stress on the syllab...

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Main Author: Eric Baković
Format: Article
Language:Catalan
Published: Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona 2016-11-01
Series:Catalan Journal of Linguistics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistes.uab.cat/catJL/article/view/182
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spelling doaj-e6e865f26ad947f6a4f6d76db5cacf882021-05-04T16:16:49ZcatUniversitat Autònoma de BarcelonaCatalan Journal of Linguistics1695-68852014-97192016-11-0115092510.5565/rev/catjl.182156Exceptionality in Spanish StressEric Baković0UC San DiegoStress in vowel-final non-verbs in Spanish regularly falls on the penultimate syllable, while stress in consonant-final words regularly falls on the final syllable. There are two main classes of exceptions to this regularity: stress on the syllable preceding the regular one, and stress on the syllable following the regular one. Harris (1983) provides arguments that the second class of exceptions is morphologically systematic, but falls short of the stronger claim that this pattern is simply a subcase of the regular stress pattern. I argue here that there is much to be gained from this stronger claim, including a simple and elegant analysis of the first class of exceptions.https://revistes.uab.cat/catJL/article/view/182spanishstressexceptionsderivational stemword
collection DOAJ
language Catalan
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eric Baković
spellingShingle Eric Baković
Exceptionality in Spanish Stress
Catalan Journal of Linguistics
spanish
stress
exceptions
derivational stem
word
author_facet Eric Baković
author_sort Eric Baković
title Exceptionality in Spanish Stress
title_short Exceptionality in Spanish Stress
title_full Exceptionality in Spanish Stress
title_fullStr Exceptionality in Spanish Stress
title_full_unstemmed Exceptionality in Spanish Stress
title_sort exceptionality in spanish stress
publisher Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
series Catalan Journal of Linguistics
issn 1695-6885
2014-9719
publishDate 2016-11-01
description Stress in vowel-final non-verbs in Spanish regularly falls on the penultimate syllable, while stress in consonant-final words regularly falls on the final syllable. There are two main classes of exceptions to this regularity: stress on the syllable preceding the regular one, and stress on the syllable following the regular one. Harris (1983) provides arguments that the second class of exceptions is morphologically systematic, but falls short of the stronger claim that this pattern is simply a subcase of the regular stress pattern. I argue here that there is much to be gained from this stronger claim, including a simple and elegant analysis of the first class of exceptions.
topic spanish
stress
exceptions
derivational stem
word
url https://revistes.uab.cat/catJL/article/view/182
work_keys_str_mv AT ericbakovic exceptionalityinspanishstress
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