Papers of the ... Algonquian Conference, Volume 22Carleton University, 1991 - Algonquian Indians |
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Page 22
... stress ; and for the first unit in particular , and for longer utterances , these have been marked as an aid to memory : ( ' ) is used to show the strongest stress on a word or phrase . ( ) is used to mark the next to strongest ...
... stress ; and for the first unit in particular , and for longer utterances , these have been marked as an aid to memory : ( ' ) is used to show the strongest stress on a word or phrase . ( ) is used to mark the next to strongest ...
Page 24
... stress rule . The difference however is that the stress on the right is attached to a different vowel from the stem on the left , since the vowel to which stress is originally assigned is elided . In other words , the segmental material ...
... stress rule . The difference however is that the stress on the right is attached to a different vowel from the stem on the left , since the vowel to which stress is originally assigned is elided . In other words , the segmental material ...
Page 27
... stress assignment . The first two require morphological bracketing , hence lexical rules , and the stress rule does not require morpho- logical analysis , hence it is ... stress or accent in Cree is LEXICAL DERIVATION AND STRESS 27.
... stress assignment . The first two require morphological bracketing , hence lexical rules , and the stress rule does not require morpho- logical analysis , hence it is ... stress or accent in Cree is LEXICAL DERIVATION AND STRESS 27.
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Algonquian American animate appear bear called Carleton University century changed clauses communities considered context continue Cree culture derivation described dialects discourse discussion Eastern English European evidence example expressed fact females final French function further give given hoods important Indian indicate individuals influence James Jesuit John Lake land language later linguistic living Maine marriages material means Michif Michigan migration Montagnais narrative Native North noted occur Ojibwa original Ottawa passive patterns person Plains possible Powhatan present Press proximate question records REFERENCES region reported River rule Sauk social Society songs sources speaker stem story stress structure trade traditional tribes University verb vowel Wabanaki Western women York