UD Phonology Lab Stress Pattern Database
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Top     Primary stress     Secondary stress     Syllables     Phonotactics     Tail fsa     Head fsa     Exact Pattern Matches     Primary Pattern Matches     Secondary Pattern Matches     Primary and Secondary Pattern Matches     Phonotactics Matches     Stress Pattern Generator    
Malakmalak Pattern - 12@sL Primary, i2@2R Secondary
Primary stress pattern
SPC: 12@sL
In words of three or more syllables, primary stress falls on the initial syllable if it has secondary stress, else on the peninitial syllable if has secondary stress.
SPC: 1L
In words of three or fewer syllables, primary stress falls on the initial syllable.
Secondary stress pattern
SPC: i2@2R
In words of three or more syllables, secondary stress falls iteratively on even numbered syllables, counting from the right.
SPC: None
In words of three or fewer syllables, 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.
Finite State Acceptors
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 |
| 7 | 8 | 1 | 4 |
This acceptor is 1-1 neighborhood-distinct.
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0 0,1,w0.s2 0,6,w0.s0 1,2,w0.s0 2,3,w0.s1 2,5,w0.s0 3,4,w0.s0 4,3,w0.s1 6,3,w0.s2 1,2,4,5 |
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The Head Canonical Acceptor
| states | transitions | initial | final |
| 7 | 10 | 2 | 1 |
This acceptor is 1-1 neighborhood-distinct.
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0,4 0,1,w0.s2 0,2,w0.s2 0,4,w0.s0 2,3,w0.s0 3,1,w0.s0 4,3,w0.s2 4,5,w0.s2 5,6,w0.s0 6,3,w0.s1 6,5,w0.s1 1 |
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1 Languages match this pattern exactly:
3 Languages with the same primary stress pattern as this pattern:
16 Languages with the same secondary stress pattern as this pattern:
1 Languages with the same primary and secondary stress patterns as this pattern:
No phonotactic data available for this pattern.
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".

