Prosodically-conditioned Syllable Structure in English

Authors

  • Paula Orzechowska Adam Mickiewicz University, Poland
  • Janina Mołczanow University of Warsaw, Poland
  • Michał Jankowski Adam Mickiewicz University, Poland

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18778/1731-7533.17.2.04

Keywords:

English, lexical stress, onsets, phonotactics

Abstract

This paper investigates the interplay between the metrical structure and phonotactic complexity in English, a language with lexical stress and an elaborate inventory of consonant clusters. The analysis of a dictionary- and corpus-based list of polysyllabic words leads to two major observations. First, there is a tendency for onsetful syllables to attract stress, and for onsetless syllables to repel it. Second, the stressed syllable embraces a greater array of consonant clusters than unstressed syllables. Moreover, the farther form the main stress, the less likely the unstressed syllable is to contain a complex onset. This finding indicates that the ability of a position to license complex onsets is related to its distance from the prosodic head.

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Published

2019-06-30

How to Cite

Orzechowska, P., Mołczanow, J., & Jankowski, M. (2019). Prosodically-conditioned Syllable Structure in English. Research in Language, 17(2), 167–178. https://doi.org/10.18778/1731-7533.17.2.04

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Articles