In:Athabaskan Prosody
Edited by Sharon Hargus and Keren Rice
[Current Issues in Linguistic Theory 269] 2005
► pp. vii–viii
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Published online: 26 October 2005
https://doi.org/10.1075/cilt.269.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/cilt.269.toc
Table of contents
Contributorsix
Acknowledgmentsxi
Introduction
Part I. TONE
The historical development of tone: A pan-Athabaskan perspective on the phonology
Preface to Michael Krauss’ article
Athabaskan Tone (1979)
The historical development of tone: A phonetic perspective
The Phonetics of Athabaskan Tonogenesis
Case Studies
On Tone and Length in Taltan (Northern Athabaskan)
The Tonology of the Western Apache Noun Stem
Properties of Tone in Dene Soun’liné
Pitch, Tone and Intonation in Tanacross
Part II. PROMINENCE BEYOND TONE
A pan-Athabaskan perspective on stress
How stress shapes the stem-suffix complex in Athabaskan
Case Studies
Duration, Intonation and Prominence in Apache
Prominence and the verb stem in Slave (Hare)
A Corpus-based Approach to Tahltan Stress
Prosody in two Athabaskan languages of northern British Columbia
Index
