pronunciation - Which syllable is stressed in the word "nineteen"?


The dictionaries list both possibilities to stress nineteen (or any other -teen, for that matter): ,nine-teen and nine-'teen.


Are the two pronunciations completely interchangeable, a matter of dialect, or a matter of meaning? I am asking because I've never heard nineteen stressed on the first syllable in sentences like:



I am nineteen years old.


He had only nineteen dollars.



And I have never heard nineteen stressed on the second syllable in dates:



He was born in nineteen sixty-four.



Is it acceptable (where, when?) to stress the first syllable in the first set of examples, and is it acceptable(where, when?) to stress the second syllable in the last example?


P.S. Surprisingly there's no tag. Am I using the wrong linguistic term?



Answer



All the number words for 13–19 are normally stressed on the first syllable (or none at all), but can be stressed on the second syllable for emphasis or contrast. It really depends on the sentence.



  • I’ve got twelve. You’ve got thirˈteen. He’s got ˈfifteen.

  • He’ll turn eighˈteen on his next birthday.

  • I’ll shoot ˈeighteen holes today, not just ˈthirteen like last week.


If you were counting out a sequence, you would never stress the -teen portion:



  • ˈseven, ˈeight, ˈnine, ˈten, eˈleven, ˈtwelve, ˈthirteen, ˈfourteen, ˈfifteen, ˈsixteen, ˈseventeen, ˈeighteen, ˈnineteen, ˈtwenty, twenty-ˈone, twenty-ˈtwo, ...


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