Author:
Outi Bat-El Tel-Aviv University

Search for other papers by Outi Bat-El in
Current site
Google Scholar
PubMed
Close
Full access

The paper addresses historical changes in the stress system of Hebrew, attending to the difference between Biblical Hebrew (script-based) and contemporary Hebrew (attested), and predicting the system of post-Hebrew; on the basis of experimental evidence and words from the periphery of the lexicon, it is predicted that the stress system of post-Hebrew will be similar to that of Biblical Hebrew. The predicted change from contemporary Hebrew to post-Hebrew is attributed to a combination of two factors: the inconsistency of the present system, and its incompliance with universal principles. The changes are addressed in terms of constraint reranking within the framework of Optimality Theory.

  • Adam, Galit and Outi Bat-El. 2008. The trochaic bias is universal: Evidence from Hebrew. In A. Gavarró and M. J. Freitas (eds.) Language acquisition and development: Proceedings of GALA 2007. Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars Publishing. 1224.

    • Search Google Scholar
    • Export Citation
  • Adam, Galit and Outi Bat-El. 2009. When do universal preferences emerge in language development? The acquisition of Hebrew stress. Brill’s Annual of Afroasiatic Languages and Linguistics 1. 128.

    • Search Google Scholar
    • Export Citation
  • Allen, George D. and Sarah Hawkins. 1978. The development of phonological rhythm. In A. Bell and J. Hooper (eds.) Syllables and segments. Amsterdam: North-Holland. 173185.

    • Search Google Scholar
    • Export Citation
  • Aronoff, Mark. 1985. Orthography and linguistic theory: The syntactic basis of Masoretic Hebrew punctuation. Language 61. 2872.

  • Bat-El, Outi. 1989. Phonology and word structure in Modern Hebrew. Doctoral dissertation. UCLA.

  • Bat-El, Outi. 1993. Parasitic metrification in the Modern Hebrew stress system. Linguistic Review 10. 189210.

  • Bat-El, Outi. 1994. The optimal acronym word in Hebrew. In P. Koskinen (ed.) Proceedings of the 1994 annual conference of the canadian linguistic association. Toronto: Toronto Working Papers in Linguistics. 2337. (in Hebrew)

    • Search Google Scholar
    • Export Citation
  • Bat-El, Outi. 2000. The grammaticality of “extragrammatical” morphology. In U. Doleschal and A. M. Thornton (eds.) Extragrammatical and marginal morphology. München: Lincom Europa. 6184.

    • Search Google Scholar
    • Export Citation
  • Bat-El, Outi. 2005. The emergence of the trochaic foot in Hebrew hypocoristics. Phonology 20. 129.

  • Bat-El, Outi. 2008. Morphologically conditioned V–∅ alternation in Hebrew: Distinction among nouns, adjectives and participles, and verbs. In S. Armon-Lotem, G. Danon and S. Rothstein (eds.) Current issues in generative Hebrew linguistics. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 2760.

    • Search Google Scholar
    • Export Citation
  • Bat-El, Outi. 2012. Prosodic alternations in Modern Hebrew segolates. In M. Muchnik and T. Sadan (eds.) Studies in Modern Hebrew and Jewish Languages. Jerusalem: Carmel. 116129.

    • Search Google Scholar
    • Export Citation
  • Becker, Michael. 2002. Hebrew stress: Can’t you hear those trochees? MA thesis. Tel-Aviv University.

  • Becker, Michael. 2003. Lexical stratification of Hebrew: The disyllabic maximum. In Y. N. Falk (ed.) Proceedings of the 19th Annual Conference of the Israel Association for Theoretical Linguistics. Jerusalem: Israel Association for Theoretical Linguistic. 111.

    • Search Google Scholar
    • Export Citation
  • Ben-David, Avivit. 2001. Language acquisition and phonological theory: Universal and variable processes across children and across languages. Doctoral dissertation. Tel-Aviv University. (in Hebrew)

  • Ben-David, Avivit and Outi Bat-El. 2016. Paths and stages in the acquisition of Hebrew phonological word. In R. Berman (ed.) Acquisition and development of Hebrew: From infancy to adolescence. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 3968.

    • Search Google Scholar
    • Export Citation
  • Blau, Joshua. 2010. The phonology and morphology of Biblical Hebrew. Jerusalem: The Academy of the Hebrew Language. (in Hebrew)

  • Bolozky, Shmuel. 1995. The segholates: Linear or discontinuous derivation? In O. Schwarzwald and Y. Schlesinger (eds.) Hadassah Kantor Jubilee Book. Ramat Gan: Bar-Ilan University. 1726.

    • Search Google Scholar
    • Export Citation
  • Bolozky, Shmuel. 2008. Hebrew verbs frequency list. Unpublished manuscript.

  • Bolozky, Shmuel. 2000. Stress placement as a morphological and semantic marker in Israeli Hebrew. Hebrew Studies 41. 5382.

  • Bolozky, Shmuel and Michael Becker. 2006. Living lexicon of Hebrew nouns. Manuscript, University of Massachusetts Amherst.

  • Churchyard, Henry. 1999. Topics in Tiberian Biblical Hebrew metrical phonology and phonetics. Doctoral dissertation. University of Texas at Austin.

  • Coetzee, Andries W. 1999. Tiberian Hebrew Phonology: Focusing on consonant clusters. Assen: Van Gorcum.

  • Cohen, Evan G. 2009. The role of similarity in phonology: Evidence from loanword adaptation in Hebrew. Doctoral dissertation. Tel-Aviv University.

  • Cohen, Evan G. 2013. The emergence of the unmarked: Vowel harmony in Hebrew loanword adaptation. Lingua 132. 6679.

  • Cohen, Evan G., Vered Silber-Varod and N. Amir. 2018. The acoustics of primary and secondary stress in Modern Hebrew. Brill’s Journal of Afroasiatic Languages and Linguistics.

  • Dresher, Bezalel Elan. 1981. Accentuation and metrical structure in Tiberian Hebrew. MIT Working Papers in Linguistics 3. 180208.

  • Dresher, Bezalel Elan. 1994. The prosodic basis of the Tiberian Hebrew system of accents. Language 70. 152.

  • Dresher, Bezalel Elan. 2009. Stress assignment in Tiberian Hebrew. In C. Cairns and E. Raimy (eds.) Contemporary views on architecture and representations in phonological theor. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. 213224.

    • Search Google Scholar
    • Export Citation
  • Fainleib, Lena. 2008. Default stress in unpredictable stress languages: Evidence from Russian and Hebrew. MA thesis. Tel-Aviv University.

  • Fainleib, Lena. 2013. Lexical distributions and productive generalizations of stress in Modern Hebrew nouns. A poster presented in the Phonology Conference, University of Massachusetts.

  • Florentin, Moshe. 2002. The Hebrew stress curve and what can we learn from it and from Samaritan Hebrew on stress in the Mishna. Leshonenu 64. 221230. (in Hebrew)

    • Search Google Scholar
    • Export Citation
  • Florentin, Moshe. 2015. Pre-Tiberian Hebrew and the heavy syllable law: A different approach for explaining the conditions of vowel reduction and lengthening during the pre-Tiberian stage of the language. Leshonenu 77. 161176. (in Hebrew)

    • Search Google Scholar
    • Export Citation
  • Garr, Randall W. 1989. The seghol and segholation in Hebrew. Journal of Near Eastern Studies 48. 109116.

  • Gordon, Matthew. 2006. Syllable weight: Phonetics, phonology, typology. London & New York: Routledge.

  • Graf, Dafna. 1999. Metrical structure of Modern Hebrew nominals. MA thesis. Heine University, Düsseldorf.

  • Graf, Dafna and Adam Ussishkin. 2002. Emergent iambs: Stress in modern hebrew. Lingua 113. 239270.

  • Green, Antony D. 2004. Opacity in Tiberian Hebrew: Morphology, not phonology. ZAS Papers in Linguistics 37. 3770.

  • Halle, Morris and Jean-Roger Vergnaud. 1987. An essay on stress. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.

  • Hayes, Bruce. 1980. A metrical theory of stress rules. Doctoral dissertation. MIT.

  • Hayes, Bruce. 1989. Compensatory lengthening in Moraic Phonology. Linguistic Inquiry 20. 253306.

  • Hayes, Bruce. 1995. Metrical stress theory. Principles and case studies. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.

  • Horvath, Julia and Paul Wexler. 1994. Unspoken languages and the issue of genetic classification: The case of Hebrew. Linguistics 32. 241269.

    • Search Google Scholar
    • Export Citation
  • Itô, Junko and Armin Mester. 1995. The core–periphery structure of the lexicon and constraints on reranking. In J. N. Beckman, L. W. Dickey and S. Urbanczyk (eds.) Papers in Optimality Theory (University of Massachusetts Occasional Papers 18). Amherst, MA: GLSA. 181209.

    • Search Google Scholar
    • Export Citation
  • Itô, Junko and Armin Mester. 1999. The structure of the phonological lexicon. In T. Natsuko (ed.) The handbook of Japanese linguistics. Cambridge, MA & Oxford: Blackwell. 62100.

    • Search Google Scholar
    • Export Citation
  • Khan, Geoffrey (ed.). 2013a. Encyclopedia of Hebrew Language and Linguistics online. Leiden: Brill.

  • Khan, Geoffrey. 2013b. Stress: Biblical Hebrew. In Khan (2013a).

  • Khan, Geoffrey. 2013c. Vowel length: Biblical Hebrew. In Khan (2013a).

  • LaCharité, Darlene and Carole Paradis. 2005. Category preservation and proximity versus phonetic approximation in loanword adaptation. Linguistic Inquiry 36. 223258.

    • Search Google Scholar
    • Export Citation
  • Liberman, Mark and Alan Prince. 1977. On stress and linguistic rhythm. Linguistic Inquiry 8. 249336.

  • Lieberman, Philip and Sheila Blumstein. 1998. Speech physiology, speech perception, and acoustic phonetics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

  • Lowenstamm, Jean and Jonathan Kaye. 1986. Compensatory lengthening in Tiberian Hebrew. In L. Wetzels and E. Sezer (eds.) Studies in compensatory lengthening. Dordrecht: Foris. 97132.

    • Search Google Scholar
    • Export Citation
  • McCarthy, John J. 1979. Formal problems in Semitic phonology and morphology. Doctoral dissertation. MIT.

  • McCarthy, John J. 1999. Sympathy and phonological opacity. Phonology 16. 331399.

  • Paradis, Carole and Darlene LaCharité. 1997. Preservation and minimality in loanword adaptation. Journal of Linguistics 33. 379430.

  • Pariente, Itsik and Shmuel Bolozky. 2014. Stress shift and trochaic structures in the nominal system of Modern Hebrew. Brill’s Annual of Afroasiatic Languages and Linguistics 6. 126.

    • Search Google Scholar
    • Export Citation
  • Rappaport, Malka. 1984. Issues in the phonology of Tiberian Hebrew. Doctoral dissertation. MIT.

  • Rendsburg, Gary A. 2007. Ancient Hebrew morphology. In A. Kaye (ed.) Morphologies of Asia and Africa. Volume 1. Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns. 85105.

    • Search Google Scholar
    • Export Citation
  • Revell, Ernest J. 1985. The voweling of “i type” segolates in Tiberian Hebrew. Journal of the American Oriental Society 44. 319328.

    • Search Google Scholar
    • Export Citation
  • Revithiadou, Anthi, Kalomoira Nikolou and Despina Papadopoulou. 2015. Stress in the absence of morphological conditioning: An experimental investigation of stress in Greek acronyms. Journal of Greek Linguistics 15. 187234.

    • Search Google Scholar
    • Export Citation
  • Schwarzwald, Ora R. 1998. Word foreignness in Modern Hebrew. Hebrew Studies 39. 115142.

  • Segal, Osnat, Brach Nir-Sagiv, Liat Kishon-Rabin and Dorit Ravid. 2009. Prosodic patterns in Hebrew child directed speech. Journal of Child Language 36. 629665.

    • Search Google Scholar
    • Export Citation
  • Vihman, Marilyn, Rory DePaolis and Barbara Davis. 1998. Is there a “trochaic bias” in early word learning? Evidence from infant production in English and French. Child Development 69. 935949.

    • Search Google Scholar
    • Export Citation
  • Zadok, Gila. 2002. Abbreviations: A unified analysis of acronym words, clippings, clipped compounds and hypocoristics. MA thesis. Tel-Aviv University.

    • Search Google Scholar
    • Export Citation
  • Collapse
  • Expand

Editors

Editor-in-Chief: András Cser

Editor: György Rákosi

Review Editor: Tamás Halm

Editorial Board

  • Anne Abeillé / Université Paris Diderot
  • Željko Bošković / University of Connecticut
  • Marcel den Dikken / Eötvös Loránd University; Hungarian Research Centre for Linguistics, Budapest
  • Hans-Martin Gärtner / Hungarian Research Centre for Linguistics, Budapest
  • Elly van Gelderen / Arizona State University
  • Anders Holmberg / Newcastle University
  • Katarzyna Jaszczolt / University of Cambridge
  • Dániel Z. Kádár / Hungarian Research Centre for Linguistics, Budapest
  • István Kenesei / University of Szeged; Hungarian Research Centre for Linguistics, Budapest
  • Anikó Lipták / Leiden University
  • Katalin Mády / Hungarian Research Centre for Linguistics, Budapest
  • Gereon Müller / Leipzig University
  • Csaba Pléh / Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Central European University
  • Giampaolo Salvi / Eötvös Loránd University
  • Irina Sekerina / College of Staten Island CUNY
  • Péter Siptár / Hungarian Research Centre for Linguistics, Budapest
  • Gregory Stump / University of Kentucky
  • Peter Svenonius / University of Tromsø
  • Anne Tamm / Károli Gáspár University of the Reformed Church
  • Akira Watanabe / University of Tokyo
  • Jeroen van de Weijer / Shenzhen University

 

Acta Linguistica Academica
Address: Benczúr u. 33. HU–1068 Budapest, Hungary
Phone: (+36 1) 351 0413; (+36 1) 321 4830 ext. 154
Fax: (36 1) 322 9297
E-mail: ala@nytud.mta.hu

Indexing and Abstracting Services:

  • Arts and Humanities Citation Index
  • Bibliographie Linguistique/Linguistic Bibliography
  • International Bibliographies IBZ and IBR
  • Linguistics Abstracts
  • Linguistics and Language Behaviour Abstracts
  • MLA International Bibliography
  • SCOPUS
  • Social Science Citation Index
  • LinguisList

 

2024  
Scopus  
CiteScore  
CiteScore rank  
SNIP  
Scimago  
SJR index 0.193
SJR Q rank Q1

2023  
Web of Science  
Journal Impact Factor 0.5
Rank by Impact Factor Q3 (Linguistics)
Journal Citation Indicator 0.37
Scopus  
CiteScore 1.0
CiteScore rank Q1 (Literature and Literary Theory)
SNIP 0.571
Scimago  
SJR index 0.344
SJR Q rank Q1

Acta Linguistica Academica
Publication Model Hybrid
Submission Fee none
Article Processing Charge 900 EUR/article
Effective from  1st Feb 2025:
1200 EUR/article
Printed Color Illustrations 40 EUR (or 10 000 HUF) + VAT / piece
Regional discounts on country of the funding agency World Bank Lower-middle-income economies: 50%
World Bank Low-income economies: 100%
Further Discounts Editorial Board / Advisory Board members: 50%
Corresponding authors, affiliated to an EISZ member institution subscribing to the journal package of Akadémiai Kiadó: 100%
Subscription fee 2025 Online subsscription: 648 EUR / 712 USD
Print + online subscription: 744 EUR / 820 USD
Subscription Information Online subscribers are entitled access to all back issues published by Akadémiai Kiadó for each title for the duration of the subscription, as well as Online First content for the subscribed content.
Purchase per Title Individual articles are sold on the displayed price.

Acta Linguistica Academica
Language English
Size B5
Year of
Foundation
2017 (1951)
Volumes
per Year
1
Issues
per Year
4
Founder Magyar Tudományos Akadémia   
Founder's
Address
H-1051 Budapest, Hungary, Széchenyi István tér 9.
Publisher Akadémiai Kiadó
Publisher's
Address
H-1117 Budapest, Hungary 1516 Budapest, PO Box 245.
Responsible
Publisher
Chief Executive Officer, Akadémiai Kiadó
ISSN 2559-8201 (Print)
ISSN 2560-1016 (Online)