UD Phonology Lab Stress Pattern Database
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Top Primary stress Secondary stress syllables phonotactics notes sources tail fsa head fsa Stress Pattern Generator
Arabela
Ethnologue code(s): arlThis language has a quantity-insensitive stress system.
Primary stress pattern
SPC: 1L
In words of all sizes, primary stress falls on the initial syllable.
Secondary stress pattern
SPC: None
In words of all sizes, there is no secondary stress. This is deliberately ambiguous between "none reported" in a source and "verifiably none".
Syllable Weight Hierarchy
| W0 | W1 | W2 | W3 | W4 |
| any |
Relevant phonotactics
As far as we know, there is no relevant phonotactic information for this language.
Sources
- Gordon, Matthew. 2002. A factorial typology of quantity insensitive stress. Natural Language and Linguistic Theory 20. pages 491-552.
- Rich, Furne. 1963. Arabela phone mes and high-level phonology. In Elson, Benjamin, ed. Studies in Peruvian Indian Languages I, pp. 193-206.
Finite State Acceptors - Afrikaans Pattern
The format for the acceptors below is start states, final states, and transitions.
The labels indicate the syllable weight and level of stress.
For example, w0.s2 means a syllable of weight 0 with primary stress; w1.s1 means a
syllable of weight 1 with secondary stress and so on.
The Tail Canonical Acceptor
| states | transitions | initial | final |
| 2 | 2 | 1 | 1 |
This acceptor is 1-1 neighborhood-distinct.
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0 0,1,w0.s2 1,1,w0.s0 1 |
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The Head Canonical Acceptor
| states | transitions | initial | final |
| 2 | 2 | 1 | 1 |
This acceptor is 1-1 neighborhood-distinct.
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0 0,1,w0.s2 1,1,w0.s0 1 |
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Stress Pattern Generator
In order to use the Stress Pattern Generator, enter a string of 0s (zeroes) delimited by spaces in the box below, each 0 represents one syllable of the word
Example input:
A three syllable word would be represented as "0 0 0".

