Foot structure in Germanic

A foot is an organising unit of prosodic structure built on moras and syllables. Prominence falls on the heads of feet, and feet can be right or left-headed (an iamb or a trochee, respectively). Feet can be constructed from the right or the left edge and lexical stress falls on the head of the leftm...

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Main Authors: Booth, J, Lahiri, A
Format: Book section
Language:English
Published: Oxford University Press 2023
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author Booth, J
Lahiri, A
author_facet Booth, J
Lahiri, A
author_sort Booth, J
collection OXFORD
description A foot is an organising unit of prosodic structure built on moras and syllables. Prominence falls on the heads of feet, and feet can be right or left-headed (an iamb or a trochee, respectively). Feet can be constructed from the right or the left edge and lexical stress falls on the head of the leftmost or rightmost foot. The metrical system of a language can thus be defined by (i) the nature of the foot (trochee/iamb), (ii) the direction of parsing and (iii) the foot that carries main stress. Each prosodic word minimally comprises a stressed foot. Germanic languages are traditionally divided into three branches, East Germanic (Gothic), West Germanic and North Germanic. East Germanic has no modern descendants, unlike the latter two branches, which include, for example, English, German and Dutch (West Germanic) and Danish, Norwegian and Swedish (North Germanic). The status of the foot has remained remarkably consistent across the history of Germanic, remaining trochaic and quantity sensitive (although details differ across the relevant languages). This is despite significant changes to the quantity systems of Germanic languages, which have almost exclusively lost the distinction in either vowel or consonant quantity (whereas Proto-Germanic had both). The extensive borrowing from Romance languages across Germanic has also had a substantial impact. Germanic words rarely contain more than one foot, whereas Romance loans are largely longer than native Germanic vocabulary and therefore frequently comprise two or more feet. Due to the fact that native vocabulary was broadly stressed on the initial foot, whereas Romance loans often retained right-edge stress, a choice had to be made as to which foot to stress and the modern languages demonstrate that the right edge was selected in every case. Thus, whilst feet remain quantity sensitive and trochaic, the modern languages construct them from right to left and place main stress on the rightmost foot. This is in contrast to the early stages of the languages, when the opposite was the case.
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spelling oxford-uuid:f2a5c50c-3574-4c99-b1e7-f4914df169382024-09-24T14:21:15ZFoot structure in GermanicBook sectionhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_1843uuid:f2a5c50c-3574-4c99-b1e7-f4914df16938EnglishSymplectic ElementsOxford University Press2023Booth, JLahiri, AA foot is an organising unit of prosodic structure built on moras and syllables. Prominence falls on the heads of feet, and feet can be right or left-headed (an iamb or a trochee, respectively). Feet can be constructed from the right or the left edge and lexical stress falls on the head of the leftmost or rightmost foot. The metrical system of a language can thus be defined by (i) the nature of the foot (trochee/iamb), (ii) the direction of parsing and (iii) the foot that carries main stress. Each prosodic word minimally comprises a stressed foot. Germanic languages are traditionally divided into three branches, East Germanic (Gothic), West Germanic and North Germanic. East Germanic has no modern descendants, unlike the latter two branches, which include, for example, English, German and Dutch (West Germanic) and Danish, Norwegian and Swedish (North Germanic). The status of the foot has remained remarkably consistent across the history of Germanic, remaining trochaic and quantity sensitive (although details differ across the relevant languages). This is despite significant changes to the quantity systems of Germanic languages, which have almost exclusively lost the distinction in either vowel or consonant quantity (whereas Proto-Germanic had both). The extensive borrowing from Romance languages across Germanic has also had a substantial impact. Germanic words rarely contain more than one foot, whereas Romance loans are largely longer than native Germanic vocabulary and therefore frequently comprise two or more feet. Due to the fact that native vocabulary was broadly stressed on the initial foot, whereas Romance loans often retained right-edge stress, a choice had to be made as to which foot to stress and the modern languages demonstrate that the right edge was selected in every case. Thus, whilst feet remain quantity sensitive and trochaic, the modern languages construct them from right to left and place main stress on the rightmost foot. This is in contrast to the early stages of the languages, when the opposite was the case.
spellingShingle Booth, J
Lahiri, A
Foot structure in Germanic
title Foot structure in Germanic
title_full Foot structure in Germanic
title_fullStr Foot structure in Germanic
title_full_unstemmed Foot structure in Germanic
title_short Foot structure in Germanic
title_sort foot structure in germanic
work_keys_str_mv AT boothj footstructureingermanic
AT lahiria footstructureingermanic