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Listed in order from highest to lowest are the categories of the hierarchy that are most commonly used in theoretical phonology. There is some disagreement on the arrangement and inclusion of units, especially those that reside higher in the hierarchy. For example, the clitic group is not considered
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utterance, each nested within the next highest region. Different research traditions make use of slightly different hierarchies. For instance, there is one hierarchy which is primarily used in theoretical phonology, while a similar hierarchy is used in
45:'s version of the hierarchy, while the minor phrase or accentual phrase are not considered to be separate from the phonological phrase in
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Shattuck-Hufnagel, Stephanie; Turk, Alice (1996). "A Prosody
Tutorial for Investigators of Auditory Sentence Processing".
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The phonological hierarchy as it is defined in the discourse analytical tradition is listed below.
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Hayes, Bruce (1989). Kiparsky, P.; Youmans, G. (eds.). "The prosodic hierarchy in meter".
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describes a series of increasingly smaller regions of a
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363:Nespor, M.; Vogel, I. (1986).
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