Revisiting Top-Down Primary Stress

Authors

Abstract

Metrical theory recognizes differences between primary and non-primary stresses, sometimes within the same language. In serial theories, this has often led to a parametric approach in derivation: some languages are ‘top-down’, with the primary stress assigned first, while other languages are ‘bottom-up’, where foot construction precedes primary stress placement. This paper examines two languages (Cahuilla and Yine) that have be treated as ‘top-down’ in rulebased metrical theory, and it shows that neither requires a top-down analysis in Harmonic Serialism, a derivational version of Optimality Theory. On the basis of these case studies it is argued that the common, intuitive notion of what makes a language ‘top-down’—a primary stress’s independence from non-primary stresses—is oversimplified. The case studies reveal the importance of theoretical framework and typological predictions in establishing the order of primary and non-primary stress assignment. The argument culminates in a concise statement of Harmonic Serialism-specific criteria for establishing that a top-down derivation is required.

Keywords

primary stress, Harmonic Serialism, metrical theory, top-down, bottom-up

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Published

2019-12-22

How to Cite

Pruitt, K. (2019). Revisiting Top-Down Primary Stress. Catalan Journal of Linguistics, 18, 41–77. https://doi.org/10.5565/rev/catjl.262

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