Phonetic lapse in American English –ative
Juliet Stanton
February 2019
 

This paper argues that constraints regulating the distribution of metrical prominence must be able to reference fine-grained durational information. Evidence comes from an apparent segmental effect on stress in American English –ative: stress on –at- is more likely when it is preceded by an obstruent or cluster (as in irrigative, integrative) than when preceded by a vowel or sonorant consonant (as in palliative, speculative; see Nanni 1977). I propose that this pattern should be understood as an effect of phonetically evaluated *Lapse: longer lapses are penalized more severely than shorter ones. Results from two studies of speaker preferences for stress placement in nonce –ative forms support this proposal.
Format: [ pdf ]
Reference: lingbuzz/004074
(please use that when you cite this article)
Published in: to appear in Glossa
keywords: phonology, phonetics, stress, english
previous versions: v2 [December 2018]
v1 [June 2018]
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