Main Page | Alphabetical index | English Encyclopedia

Stress (linguistics)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
In linguistics, stress is the emphasis given to some syllables (often no more than one in each word, but in many languages, long words have a secondary stress a few syllables away from the primary stress, as in the words cóunterfòil or còunterintélligence).

The way stress manifests itself in the speech stream is highly language-dependent. In some languages, stressed syllables have a higher pitch than non-stressed syllables — so-called pitch accent (or musical accent). There are also the following types of accents: force accent (also known as dynamic accent), quantitative accent, qualitative accent.

English is a so-called stress-timed language, ie. stressed syllables appear at a roughly constant rate, and non-stressed syllables are shortened to accommodate this. Stressed syllables in English also have higher pitch than unstressed ones.

Stressed syllables are often perceived as more forceful or louder than non-stressed syllables. Research has shown, however, that vocal stress does not imply louder phonation, nor more forceful articulatory gestures.

Some languages have fixed stress, ie. stress is placed always on a given syllable, as in French (where words are always stressed in the last syllable), Finnish (stress always on the first syllable) or Quechua and Esperanto (always on the penultima -- the syllable before the last one). Other languages have stress placed on different syllables in a predictable way (they're said to have a regular stress rule), such as Latin.

There are also languages like English or Spanish, where stress is unpredictable and arbitrary, being lexical; that is, it comes as part of the word and must be learned with it. In this kind of language two words can differ only by the position of the stress, and therefore it's possible to use stress as a derivative or inflectional device. English shows this with noun/verb pairs such as to record ("to register, to inscribe") vs. a record ("a register, an entry"), where the verb is stressed on the last syllable and the corresponding noun is stressed on the first. Further, many words have different stresses in British English and American English.

In Romance languages, stress takes part in the verb conjugation and it produces an interesting phenomenon by which the vowels /e/ and /o/ in the root of some verbs become diphthongs when stressed. For example, in Spanish the verb volver has the forms volví, volviste, volvió in the past, and vuelvo, vuelves, vuelve in the present. In these Spanish verbs, stressed /o/ becomes /ue/ and stressed /e/ becomes /ie/ (Italian has /o/ → /uo/ instead).

Degrees of stress

Primary and secondary stress are distinguished in some languages. In English, phonetic primary, secondary, tertiary, and quaternary stress are sometimes described. However, these differences are not phonemic. Instead, a single phonemic lexical stress, phrase- or clause-final prosody, and the reduction of unstressed vowels conspire together. A syllable with both lexical and phrasal stress is said to have primary stress; one with only lexical stress is said to be secondary, an unstressed syllable with a full vowel is tertiary (some English vowels do not reduce to schwa), and an unstressed syllable with a reduced vowel is said to have quaternary stress, or to be unstressed. In a phonemic transcription of English words, however, only the lexical stress is required.

Stress in poetry

Poetry in English depends upon stress to establish the meter of the poem. Stress is usually thought of as strong or weak. Some people distinguish a third, intermediate stress level.

For example: in the word reconsider, the stress pattern is {} (intermediate - weak - strong - weak).

See also



Limit search to: Body and Title Deutsche Seiten Path

Websites for Stress
Showing page 1 (1 - 10 of 2295 hits) Next »
Fun game and stress quiz by Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism ... articles depicting facts and figures; advertisements as stressors; stress counseling; prescriptions for stress and depression; fitness; stress management; gadgets; and history of stress study. Fun game and stress quiz by ...
Stress, relaxation, and stress relief solutions and information including personal counselling and corporate programs. Links to other stress relief therapies, products, and programs. Stress, relaxation, and stress relief solutions and information including personal counselling ...
Find information on stress, covering symptoms, causes, risks, treatments and types. Discuss stress issues with others in forums, blogs, personal stories and recommendations. Find information on stress, covering symptoms, causes, risks, treatments and types. Discuss stress issues with others in forums, blogs, personal stories ...
The leading professional body for stress management. The ISMA website has articles from their journal Stress News, links and general advice on lifestyle and exams stress. The leading professional body for stress management. The ISMA website has articles from their journal Stress News, links and general advice on lifestyle ...
Take an online stress test. Learn to recognize the signs of stress. Take an online stress test. Learn to recognize the signs of stress.
Featuring articles on stress, healthy living and wellness. Includes links, products, services and other stress-related information. Featuring articles on stress, healthy living and wellness. Includes links, products, services and other stress-related information.
Stress tips and links to books on stress management. Stress tips and links to books on stress management.
Aide pour connaître le stress et calculer l'indice de stress. Suggestions et moyens pour mieux le gérer. Aide pour connaître le stress et calculer l'indice de stress. Suggestions et moyens pour mieux le gérer ...
Details ways to identify and manage stress effectively. Details ways to identify and manage stress effectively.
Information on PTSD (Post Traumatic Stress Disorder) including how to cope with disasters, refugees, Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, rape, torture, other stress, and road accidents. Information on PTSD (Post Traumatic Stress Disorder) including how to cope with disasters, refugees, Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, rape, torture, other stress, and road ...

Next »

Help build the largest human-edited directory on the web.
Submit a Site - Open Directory Project - Become an Editor
Free thumbnail preview by Thumbshots.org

Search for products at amazon.com:
Search:
Keywords:
amazon.com books on 'Stress (linguistics)':
Search at Google.com:
Google
WebCalSky.com Encyclopedia

Suchresultate aus unserem günstigen CalSky-Shop