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painotuksen

Painotus, or emphasis, refers to the prominence given to syllables within speech. It can occur at different levels, such as word stress (within a single word) and sentence or phrase stress (across a larger stretch of speech). Painotus arises from cues like louder voice, longer duration, and higher pitch, and it contributes to intelligibility, rhythm, and sometimes meaning.

In linguistics, painotus can be phonemic (contrastive) or non-phonemic (predictable). Phonemic stress means changing which syllable

Finnish is often cited for its relatively predictable stress pattern. Standard Finnish assigns primary painotus to

In writing, painotus is usually not marked in ordinary text, but it is a central concern in

See also: Prosody, Intonation, Phonology, Stress (linguistics).

is
stressed
can
change
a
word’s
meaning
or
grammatical
function,
while
non-phonemic
stress
mainly
helps
listeners
parse
information
and
convey
emphasis.
Many
languages
also
employ
contrastive
stress
to
highlight
a
particular
word
in
a
sentence.
the
first
syllable
of
a
word,
and
this
stress
is
not
typically
phonemically
contrastive.
Nevertheless,
pitch
accents
and
intonation
contribute
to
prosody,
and
borrowed
or
long
words
may
exhibit
varied
stress
behavior
in
practice.
Other
languages
show
a
wide
range
of
stress
patterns,
from
fixed
to
highly
variable,
and
from
weak
to
strongly
contrastive.
pronunciation
teaching,
speech
therapy,
and
rhetoric.
In
public
speaking
or
acting,
deliberate
use
of
painotus
helps
guide
listeners
and
emphasize
key
points.