Abstract
Evidence is presented that Serbo-Croatian, in contrast to other Slavic languages
with lexical prosody, is developing a prosodic system in which stressed non-stem material is avoided and surface stress is becoming a property of the word stem. Five case studies are shown in which stress is moving from non-stem material to stems. We analyse the general move towards stem-stressed prosody as the final step in a chain of language changes initiated by the Neo-Štokavian retractions, which were automatic and contrast-preserving, but led to a massive removal of stress from inflectional endings. We discuss the general reasons behind this language change in terms of markedness and, more specifically, the constraints proposed within Optimality Theory. We propose an analysis of the change under consideration in terms of a promotion of the markedness constraint StemStress, which requires stems to be stressed independently of lexical prominence.
with lexical prosody, is developing a prosodic system in which stressed non-stem material is avoided and surface stress is becoming a property of the word stem. Five case studies are shown in which stress is moving from non-stem material to stems. We analyse the general move towards stem-stressed prosody as the final step in a chain of language changes initiated by the Neo-Štokavian retractions, which were automatic and contrast-preserving, but led to a massive removal of stress from inflectional endings. We discuss the general reasons behind this language change in terms of markedness and, more specifically, the constraints proposed within Optimality Theory. We propose an analysis of the change under consideration in terms of a promotion of the markedness constraint StemStress, which requires stems to be stressed independently of lexical prominence.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Title of host publication | Advances in Formal Slavic Linguistics 2017 |
Editors | Franc Marušič, Petra Mišmaš, Rok Žaucer |
Place of Publication | Berlin |
Publisher | Language Science Press |
Chapter | 13 |
Pages | 305-322 |
Number of pages | 18 |
ISBN (Electronic) | 978-3-96110-253-2 |
ISBN (Print) | 978-3-96110-254-9 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2019 |
Publication series
Name | Open Slavic Linguistics |
---|---|
Publisher | Language Science Press |
Volume | 3 |