14
views
0
recommends
+1 Recommend
1 collections
    0
    shares
      • Record: found
      • Abstract: found
      • Article: found
      Is Open Access

      Stress in the Absence of Morphological Conditioning: An Experimental Investigation of Stress in Greek Acronyms

      research-article

      Read this article at

      ScienceOpenPublisher
      Bookmark
          There is no author summary for this article yet. Authors can add summaries to their articles on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.

          Abstract

          Greek is a morphology-dependent stress system, where stress is lexically specified for a number of individual morphemes (e.g., roots and suffixes). In the absence of lexically encoded stress, a default stress emerges. Most theoretical analyses of Greek stress that assume antepenultimate stress to represent the default (e.g., Malikouti-Drachman & Drachman 1989; Ralli & Touratzidis 1992; Revithiadou 1999) are not independently confirmed by experimental studies (e.g., Protopapas et al. 2006; Apostolouda 2012; Topintzi & Kainada 2012; Revithiadou & Lengeris in press). Here, we explore the nature of the default stress in Greek with regard to acronyms, given their lack of overt morphology and fixed stress pattern, with a goal of exploring how stress patterns are shaped when morphological information (encapsulated in the inflectional ending) is suppressed. For this purpose, we conducted two production (reading aloud) experiments, which revealed, for our consultants, first, an almost complete lack of antepenultimate stress and, second, a split between penultimate and final stress dependent on acronym length, the type of the final segment and the syllable type of the penultimate syllable. We found two predominant correspondences: (a) consonant-final acronyms and end stress and (b) vowel-final acronyms and the inflected word the vowel represents, the effect being that stress patterns for acronyms are linked to the inflected words they represent only if enough morphonological information about the acronym’s segments is available to create familiarity effects. Otherwise, we find a tendency for speakers to prefer stress at stem edges.

          Most cited references1

          • Record: found
          • Abstract: not found
          • Article: not found

          The phonological word and stress assignment in Turkish

            Bookmark

            Author and article information

            Contributors
            Journal
            15699846
            Journal of Greek Linguistics
            JGL
            Brill (The Netherlands )
            1566-5844
            1569-9846
            2015
            : 15
            : 2
            : 187-234
            Affiliations
            Aristotle University of Thessaloniki revith@ 123456lit.auth.gr
            University of the Aegean nikolou@ 123456rhodes.aegean.gr
            Aristotle University of Thessaloniki depapa@ 123456lit.auth.gr
            Article
            10.1163/15699846-01502003
            8d1067e8-7e5b-445c-8587-4b7853af28bc
            Copyright 2015 by Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands.
            History

            Social & Behavioral Sciences,Law
            acronyms,Greek stress,default stress,indeclinable words,familiarity,reading aloud experiment

            Comments

            Comment on this article