Date: Fri, 10 Nov 1995 08:05:33 -0500
From: "Joan C. Cook" cookj[AT SYMBOL GOES HERE]GUSUN.ACC.GEORGETOWN.EDU
Subject: Re: RhetORic
On Wed, 8 Nov 1995, Wayne Glowka wrote:
On a quick ride to the Wal-Mart to get some anti-freeze a minute ago, I
heard a caller from Wisconsin (I believe) tell Rush Limbaugh something
about liberal rhetORic, with stress on the second syllable.
Dwight Bolinger (sorry, I don't have the exact reference handy, but I can
find it if you want it) claims that stress sometimes shifts toward the
end of a word for focus, but it depends on the word's position in the
sentence. If that's right, your Rush fan might be producing this kind of
shift to meet the rhetorical demands of the moment, instead of
demonstrating a feature of dialect. But of course you'd have to
have the whole sentence to be able to take a stab at that analysis.
--Joan
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Joan C. Cook Imagination is
Department of Linguistics more important
Georgetown University than knowledge.
Washington, D.C., USA
cookj[AT SYMBOL GOES HERE]gusun.georgetown.edu --Albert Einstein
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