Prosodic end-weight reflects phrasal stress

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Abstract

Prosodic end-weight refers to the well-documented tendency of prosodically heavier constituents to be preferred at the ends of domains when other factors (e.g. semantics, accessibility, and syntactic complexity) are controlled. Various explanations for prosodic end-weight have been put forth, including complexity deferral, final lengthening, rhythm, phonotactics, and nuclear stress. This article adduces several new arguments for phrasal stress as a unified explanation for prosodic end-weight and proposes a constraint-based theory of the stress-weight interface in sentential prosody.

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Ryan, K. M. (2019). Prosodic end-weight reflects phrasal stress. Natural Language and Linguistic Theory, 37(1), 315–356. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11049-018-9411-6

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