The primacy of the weak in Carib prosody
Accents are normally associated with the lexically stressed syllable of a word.
The Carib language (Cornelis Kondre dialect) is an exception. Instead of association,
we there find dissociation of accent and stress. Accentuation may go to
many places inside a word, but never to its lexically stressed syllable.
As phonetic correlate of stress I relied on the conspicuous difference in duration
between the first and the second syllable that characterizes nearly all
Carib words. Accentuation I held to be the result of prominence-lending pitch
changes. The regularity stated in the first paragraph was tested by comparing
the size of pitch changes during the stress-bearing first foot with those beyond
the first foot.