Skip to main content

Lund University Publications

LUND UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

Big accents in stockholm swedish : nuclear accents, prenuclear accents, and initiality accents

Myrberg, Sara LU (2021) In Glossa 6(1).
Abstract

Stockholm Swedish has a distinction between so-called big accents and small accents (in addition to a lexical contrast between tone accent 1 and tone accent 2). The function and distribution of the big versus small accent has never been fully understood. West Germanic languages lack a corresponding distinction. While it is known that big accents appear on information-structural focus, this fact cannot account for all big accents, nor can it explain the existence of the big accent in relation to the domains of the prosodic hierarchy. In this article, the distribution of big accents in preverbal subjects is studied. A production study is presented where native speakers read sentences with preverbal subjects of four different lengths, with... (More)

Stockholm Swedish has a distinction between so-called big accents and small accents (in addition to a lexical contrast between tone accent 1 and tone accent 2). The function and distribution of the big versus small accent has never been fully understood. West Germanic languages lack a corresponding distinction. While it is known that big accents appear on information-structural focus, this fact cannot account for all big accents, nor can it explain the existence of the big accent in relation to the domains of the prosodic hierarchy. In this article, the distribution of big accents in preverbal subjects is studied. A production study is presented where native speakers read sentences with preverbal subjects of four different lengths, with or without information-structural focus. Based on the results, it is argued that heads of prosodic phrases (φ) serve as hosts of big accents (one and only one big accent per φ). The rightmost big accent in the intonation phrase (ι) is referred to as the nuclear accent, and all other (non-rightmost) big accents are referred to as prenuclear accents. Heads of φ are aligned with the right edge of φ by default. However, the leftmost φ inside an ι may (non-obligatorily) be left-headed, causing a big accent to appear at the leftmost prosodic word (ω) of ι. Such left-aligned prenuclear accents are referred to as initiality accents. These assumptions regarding the big accent in Stockholm Swedish account for the large observed variation in terms of big accent distribution in the preverbal subjects.

(Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Big accent, Initiality accent, Prosodic phrase, Stockholm Swedish, Syntax-prosody interface
in
Glossa
volume
6
issue
1
publisher
Ubiquity Press Ltd.
external identifiers
  • scopus:85110204696
ISSN
2397-1835
DOI
10.5334/GJGL.1227
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
09079eae-c3d0-4019-878b-55d67edb0311
date added to LUP
2022-01-03 14:13:06
date last changed
2022-04-27 07:00:49
@article{09079eae-c3d0-4019-878b-55d67edb0311,
  abstract     = {{<p>Stockholm Swedish has a distinction between so-called big accents and small accents (in addition to a lexical contrast between tone accent 1 and tone accent 2). The function and distribution of the big versus small accent has never been fully understood. West Germanic languages lack a corresponding distinction. While it is known that big accents appear on information-structural focus, this fact cannot account for all big accents, nor can it explain the existence of the big accent in relation to the domains of the prosodic hierarchy. In this article, the distribution of big accents in preverbal subjects is studied. A production study is presented where native speakers read sentences with preverbal subjects of four different lengths, with or without information-structural focus. Based on the results, it is argued that heads of prosodic phrases (φ) serve as hosts of big accents (one and only one big accent per φ). The rightmost big accent in the intonation phrase (ι) is referred to as the nuclear accent, and all other (non-rightmost) big accents are referred to as prenuclear accents. Heads of φ are aligned with the right edge of φ by default. However, the leftmost φ inside an ι may (non-obligatorily) be left-headed, causing a big accent to appear at the leftmost prosodic word (ω) of ι. Such left-aligned prenuclear accents are referred to as initiality accents. These assumptions regarding the big accent in Stockholm Swedish account for the large observed variation in terms of big accent distribution in the preverbal subjects.</p>}},
  author       = {{Myrberg, Sara}},
  issn         = {{2397-1835}},
  keywords     = {{Big accent; Initiality accent; Prosodic phrase; Stockholm Swedish; Syntax-prosody interface}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{1}},
  publisher    = {{Ubiquity Press Ltd.}},
  series       = {{Glossa}},
  title        = {{Big accents in stockholm swedish : nuclear accents, prenuclear accents, and initiality accents}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.5334/GJGL.1227}},
  doi          = {{10.5334/GJGL.1227}},
  volume       = {{6}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}