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- Title
The English compound stress myth<sup>1</sup>.
- Authors
Giegerich, Heinz J.
- Abstract
This study investigates the distribution of end-stress and fore-stress among English NN and NNN compounds. It finds that end-stress in NNs is not ‘exceptional’, as many researchers have claimed, but confined to a reasonably well defined class of attribute-head NNs within which it is (at least optionally) grammatical and often predictable. In NNNs – NNs with embedded NNs – both fore-stress and end-stress can occur in both the embedding and the embedded NN, giving rise to eight possible stress patterns, all of which are attested. Moreover, the distribution of fore-stress and end-stress in embedding and embedded NNs follows the regularities identified in free-standing NNs. There is therefore no reason to accept the generalization whereby in NNNs, the second element is always stressed under right-branching and the first element under left-branching. While such patterns are perhaps particularly frequent, all others are also grammatical: the Compound Stress Rule known in the literature for some fifty years, deriving stress patterns from structural geometry, is wrong.
- Subjects
ENGLISH compound words; COMPOUND words; WORD formation (Grammar); LITERATURE; GRAMMAR
- Publication
Word Structure, 2009, Vol 2, Issue 1, p1
- ISSN
1750-1245
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.3366/E1750124509000270