Compound & phrasal stress
The stress system of English is notoriously complicated, consisting of multiple levels of word-level lexical stress, which itself is complicated. On top of the lexical stress, English has stress prominence on different parts of compounds, such as compound nouns, and on different parts of grammatical phrases. In linguistics terminology, grammatical phrases refer to the following:
- noun phrase (NP), which can include, e.g., a single noun, a noun modified by an adjective or following relative clause, or a compound noun
- verb phrase (VP), including predicates
- adjective phrase (AP)
- adverb phrase (AdvP)
- prepositional phrase (PP)
For compounds with stress patterns, we need to look at the following types:
- compound nouns
- compound adjectives
- compound verbs, including phrasal verbs
1 Compound nouns
Compound nouns can be written as one or two separate words, or hyphenated. Nonetheless, they are all compounds, and are stressed without concern for spelling patterns. Regardless of orthographic conventions or patterns, the primary stress is usually on the first element (component word), and secondary stress on other component words of a compound.
armchair
cowboy garage door bus stop |
swimming pool
fast food mother-in-law X-ray |
calcium chloride
toe surgery pop song breakdown |
eye shadow
eye-opener eyewitness |
This is often true for even longer, more complex, and more novel compounds.
fingernail polish remover
mainframe computer restaurant preference survey |
word processing class
word stress rules warp drive engine |
Other complexities and quirks will be addressed here later.
2 Compound verbs
For compound verbs, the stress is sometimes on the second component, especially if they are made from Old English elements.
understand
underestimate under-report |
overindulge
overflow
|
back engineer
reverse engineer |
More often it can be on the first element.
waterproof
air-condition downsize |
house sit (or housesit)
baby sit (or babysit) lipread |
handcuff
typewrite ghostwrite tiptoe |
2.1 Phrasal verbs
Phrasal verbs have their own complications, but generally, the phrasal verb particle is most often stressed.
get over it
went up go around |
3 Compound adjectives
For compound adjectives, the stress is usually on the second component.
bad-tempered
old-fashioned well-behaved first class half price |
short-sighted
over-night second-hand hard-working high-heeled |
well-paid
narrow-minded old-looking lime-green top-notch |
low-budget
middle-aged |
However, the stress can sometimes shift to the first syllable when the adjective occurs before a noun (this can vary according to dialect, individual speakers, or how common the compound adjective is):
- A bad-tempered dog chased the middle-aged man.
A few are normally stressed on the first component.
thought-provoking
child-proof |
waterproof
time-consuming |
waterproof
time-consuming |
waterproof
time-consuming |
4 Phrasal stress
Similar to compounds is a form of stress over another type of phrase: a grammatical phrase[1]. A small grammatical phrase can have its own stress patterns, where one of the word stresses is made stronger than the others within the phrase. This typically works in phrases like these:
1. Noun phrase (NP): a noun with any combination of modifiers – adjectives, articles (the, a), and other modifiers (many, some, etc.); e.g.,
- a rock, the newspaper, an old computer, a defunct blood pressure gauge.
2. Adjective phrase (AP): An adjective by itself, usually in a predicate, or with adverbial modifiers; e.g.,
- ‘very happy’ in ‘the researcher was very happy’
3. Verb phrase (VP): A verb followed by modifiers and objects, i.e., the verb predicate, though VPs exist in different syntactic forms and levels. For example, auxiliary verbs before the main verbs can form a VP as well.
- The heron was going to eat its dinner.
- The heron ate very hurriedly.
In a noun phrase, the noun usually receives more stress than accompanying adjectives or other modifiers. In an adjective phrase, the adjective usually receives more stress than preceding adverbs. For example:
an old computer (NP) a defunct machine (NP) it’s very interesting (AP) It’s a very interesting old computer. (NP) |
We can see a distinct difference in stress patterns for noun phrases compared compound noun stress in examples like these – where mispronouncing the stress can alter the meaning.
phrasal stress | compound stress |
a hot dog (a dog that is hot)
a black bird a high chair (any chair that is tall) a red head (any head that is red-colored) a black board (a wooden board that is black) a white board (a board that is white) a big bird (a large bird) I live in a green house I live in a white house I live in a blue house |
a hot dog
a blackbird a high chair (for small children) a red head (a woman with reddish hair) a blackboard (for classrooms) a whiteboard (for classrooms) Big Bird (Sesame Street character) I work in a greenhouse I live in the White House I work in the Blue House |
- ↑ Note: In the linguistics literature, a phrase and phrasal stress refer to the domain of a noun phrase, adjective phrase, prepositional phrase, and such; this is standard linguistic terminology. I have seen a few pedagogical materials that use "phrasal stress" to refer to what linguists call nuclear stress, sentence stress, but this is non-standard terminology.