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Lista de candidatos sometidos a examen:
1) stress patterns (*)
(*) Términos presentes en el nuestro glosario de lingüística

1) Candidate: stress patterns


Is in goldstandard

1
paper CO_CuadernosdeLingüísticaHispánicatxt155 - : This study considers the syllabification perceptions of heritage speakers of Spanish (HSS), second language learners, and monolingual speakers in words with io sequences in order to understand the differences between HSS and the other two groups. Participants completed a reading task and then a listening task in which they indicated the number of syllables in each stimulus perceived. Three different lexical stress patterns were tested: stress on i (like río ), stress on o (like pidió), and atonic syllables (like folio). The results show that heritage participants behave like monolinguals with audio stimuli, but in the reading task they interpret orthographic accent marks as indicators that two vowels should be divided into separate syllables. This leads to accurate interpretations of stimuli with stress on i, since Spanish phonology dictates that stressed high vowels are syllabified in hiatus. Atonic syllables, which lack an orthographic accent, are correctly syllabified as diphthongs.

Evaluando al candidato stress patterns:


2) task: 3 (*)
3) syllables: 3

stress patterns
Lengua: eng
Frec: 28
Docs: 6
Nombre propio: / 28 = 0%
Coocurrencias con glosario: 1
Puntaje: 1.650 = (1 + (1+2.8073549220576) / (1+4.85798099512757)));
Candidato aceptado

Referencias bibliográficas encontradas sobre cada término

(Que existan referencias dedicadas a un término es también indicio de terminologicidad.)
stress patterns
: Creer, Sarah. 2002. Stress patterns of German cardinal numbers. MSc Dissertation, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh. Inédita.
: Guion, S. G. (2005). Knowledge of English word stress patterns in early and late Korean-English bilinguals. Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 27(4), 503-533.
: Wayland, R., Landfair, D., Li, B. & Guion, S. G. (2006). Native Thai speakers’ acquisition of English word stress patterns. Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 35(3), 285-304.
: ^2"As is well-known, there are distinct stress patterns associated with a) lexical stress, b) compound stress, and c) phrasal stress" (Nespor & Vogel, 2007).