UD Phonology Lab Stress Pattern Database

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View 1 Lexical accent - Stress falls on lexically-determined accents.
View 2 Find the maximally heavy syllable or syllables. If there is only one maximum, it is tonic; the remaining preceding and following syllables, if any, are alternately atonic and subtonic, those adjacent to the tonic being atonic. If there are more than one maximum, the last but one out of the maxima is the tonic; the heavy syllable(s) preceding the tonic, if there are any, are all subtonic; the remaining syllables are alternately atonic, those adjacent to the tonic or to a heavy syllable, however, being always atonic.
View 3 Lexical 2R - Stress is applied on the penultimate syllable in a lexically-defined set of words.
View 4 4R is optional in HLLH, HLLL forms - Stress on the preantepenultimate syllable is optional in forms of the shape HLLH and HLLL.
View 5 Lexical exceptions exist - Lexical exceptions to the stress patterns exist.
View 6 Syllable weight is determined by vowel quality.
View 7 Lexical exceptions to the stress pattern have been alluded to.
View 8 Lexical 1R, 2R - Stress falls on final or penultimate syllable in a lexically-determined set of words.
View 9 Lexical 1R, 3R - Stress may fall on final or antepenultimate syllable in a lexically-determined set of words.
View 10 Accented prefixes
View 11 Optional 1R - The final syllable is optionally stressed.
View 12 Lexical stress exists in words with no full vowels, so the stress pattern is ambiguous with 23..89R.
View 13 12..89/1R in first member of compound
View 14 Secondary stress falls on odd syllables from the left in careful speech, but on the penultimate syllable in casual speech.
View 15 Lexical 1R analyzed as lexical hiatus CV.V

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