Accentuated words are marked with stress labels. Here we distinguish between
different accentuation patterns. The accent labels are placed behind the respective
word, and if there's already a pronunciation comment, behind that. Just like
the boundary labelling the labelling of accents should be considered in every
single phrase - no matter how short it may be.
Primary Stress [PA]:
This label can be found with the most accentuated word of the phrase.
The word marked normally also contains the most important information for
the hearer. Usually, the label is allocated only once per phrase.
w001_ptd_001_AAA: kannst du den [B2] Videorekorder [PA] programmieren [B3 fall] ?
Secondary Stress [NA]:
All other words accentuated within a phrase are labelled with [NA]. Here,
it's quite usual to label more than one word per phrase.
w001_ptd_001_AAA: kannst [NA] du den [B2] Videorekorder [PA] programmieren [NA] [B3 fall] ?
Contrastive Stress [EK]:
When a word is more heavily stressed than usually this might be the result
of the speaker trying to emphasize or contrast something. In very obvious
cases we might use [EK] instead of [PA]. Such strong accentuations are found
rarely, though.