Barytonesis

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In phonology, barytonesis, or recessive accent, is the shift of accent from the last or following syllable to any non-final or preceding syllable of the stem, as in John Donne's poetic line: but éxtreme sense hath made them desperate, the Balto-Slavic Pedersen's law and Aeolic Greek barytonesis.[1] In Biblical Hebrew grammar, barytonesis is called נסוג אחור (nasog akhor, lit. "receding backwards").[2]

The opposite, the accent shift to the last syllable is called oxytonesis.[3]

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