Includes bibliographical references (pages 347-357) and indexes
""Chapter 1. Introduction""; ""1.1. Preliminaries""; ""1.2. Phonological and metrical structures""; ""1.3. Sieversian approaches to Old English alliterative metre""; ""1.4. The case for finite verb stress""; ""1.5. Materials and methods""; ""Chapter 2. The stress phonology of Old English""; ""2.1. Introduction""; ""2.2. Previous approaches""; ""2.3. A new model of word-level stress in Old English""; ""2.4. Phrasal-level stress in Old English""; ""2.5. Summary and departure""; ""Chapter""; ""3.1. Introduction""; ""3.2. Arguments for the proposed metrical associations""; ""3.3. Summary""
""Chapter 4. Metrical structure at the foot level: Part II""""4.1. Introduction""; ""4.2. Further foot-level metrical constraints""; ""4.3. Conclusion""; ""Chapter 5. Metrical structure at the level of the half-line and long-line""; ""5.1. Introduction""; ""5.2. Alliteration""; ""5.3. Frequencies of metrical patterns: binary-branching half-lines""; ""5.4. Frequencies of metrical patterns: ternary-branching half-lines""; ""5.5. Conclusion""; ""Chapter 6. Conclusion""; ""6.1. Introduction""; ""6.2. Summary of Chapters 1 through 5""; ""6.3. The realization of verb-second syntax""
""6.4. Stochastic Optimality Theory""""Notes""; ""References""; ""Index of subjects""; ""Index of authors""; ""Index of verses discussed""
The metre of Beowulf
a constraint-based approach
Erschienen:
2002
Verlag:
Mouton de Gruyter, Berlin
6.4. Stochastic Optimality TheoryNotes -- References -- Index of subjects -- Index of authors -- Index of verses discussed Chapter 1. Introduction -- 1.1. Preliminaries -- 1.2. Phonological and metrical structures -- 1.3. Sieversian approaches to Old...
mehr
Universitätsbibliothek der Eberhard Karls Universität
Fernleihe:
keine Fernleihe
6.4. Stochastic Optimality TheoryNotes -- References -- Index of subjects -- Index of authors -- Index of verses discussed Chapter 1. Introduction -- 1.1. Preliminaries -- 1.2. Phonological and metrical structures -- 1.3. Sieversian approaches to Old English alliterative metre -- 1.4. The case for finite verb stress -- 1.5. Materials and methods -- Chapter 2. The stress phonology of Old English -- 2.1. Introduction -- 2.2. Previous approaches -- 2.3. A new model of word-level stress in Old English -- 2.4. Phrasal-level stress in Old English -- 2.5. Summary and departure -- Chapter -- 3.1. Introduction -- 3.2. Arguments for the proposed metrical associations -- 3.3. Summary Chapter 4. Metrical structure at the foot level: Part II4.1. Introduction -- 4.2. Further foot-level metrical constraints -- 4.3. Conclusion -- Chapter 5. Metrical structure at the level of the half-line and long-line -- 5.1. Introduction -- 5.2. Alliteration -- 5.3. Frequencies of metrical patterns: binary-branching half-lines -- 5.4. Frequencies of metrical patterns: ternary-branching half-lines -- 5.5. Conclusion -- Chapter 6. Conclusion -- 6.1. Introduction -- 6.2. Summary of Chapters 1 through 5 -- 6.3. The realization of verb-second syntax